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Events for Friday, October 5, 2012

12:00 AM-11:59 PM Windows Project: TONY 2012 The Warehouse Gallery

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Lynette Blake: Within and Beyond Weeks Art Gallery at Baltimore Woods

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Gallery Exhibit: Brendan Rose & Michael Barletta: Paper, Staple, String Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-2:00 PM TONY: 2012: Ink Geographies Point of Contact Gallery

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

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Assembly-line Architecture: Repetition and Innovation in the Work of Marcel Breuer Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Investigations Syracuse University School of Architecture

9:30 AM-6:00 PM Play on Light Edgewood Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM TONY: 2012 (The Other New York) Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-5:00 PM TONY: 2012: Variography Erie Canal Museum

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Drama From the Garden: New Work by Terry Askey-Cole Gallery 54

10:00 AM-8:00 PM Carl Hoffner Exhibition Imagine

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Susan Worsham: Bittersweet/Bloodwork Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM TONY: 2012 Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Take No Prisoners: Political Cartoons Over Time and Place Onondaga Historical Association

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Syracuse Cultural Workers 100 @ 30 Onondaga Historical Association

10:00 AM-4:00 PM TONY: 2012: "Manifest Destiny and the American West" and "Last House" Onondaga Historical Association

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Sight Unseen: Stereographs from the OHA Collection, 1850-1930 Onondaga Historical Association

10:00 AM-10:00 PM Faces, Forms and Illusions: Works by Scott Hutchison Redhouse

10:00 AM-6:00 PM An American Vision: East Meets West Szozda Gallery

11:00 AM-5:00 PM Framed Un Framed 601 Tully

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Karl Schrag: Memories and Premonitions Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:30 PM TONY: 2012 Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Prophecy: Peter B. Jones Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM The Other New York: 2012 Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Puerto Rican Bomba and Plena: A Graphic History La Casita Cultural Center

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Lov U The Warehouse Gallery

12:00 PM-6:00 PM The Other New York (TONY): 2012 XL Projects

1:00 PM-6:00 PM life. love. time travel. Echo

1:00 PM-5:00 PM Raw Revelations: The Reunion of Hand Tools and Production The Warehouse Gallery

2:00 PM-7:00 PM TONY: 2012 (The Other New York) ArtRage Gallery (Read a review!)

5:00 PM-6:30 PM Bomba and Plena Music La Casita Cultural Center

6:00 PM-8:00 PM Lakeside Views Fall Ghostwalk Onondaga Historical Association

6:45 PM-11:00 PM TONY 2012: Karen Brummund Urban Video Project

7:30 PM Apollo & Dafne NYS Baroque

8:00 PM Rod MacDonald Folkus Project

8:00 PM Chris Trapper Live!

8:00 PM Assassins Redhouse (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Merrily We Roll Along Syracuse University Drama Department (Read a review!)

9:00 PM New Riders of the Purple Sage Westcott Theater

10:30 PM A...My Name is Alice Syracuse University Drama Department

Events for Saturday, October 6, 2012

12:00 AM-11:59 PM Windows Project: TONY 2012 The Warehouse Gallery

10:00 AM-2:00 PM Play on Light Edgewood Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM TONY: 2012: Variography Erie Canal Museum

10:00 AM-5:00 PM The Other New York: 2012 Everson Museum of Art

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Prophecy: Peter B. Jones Everson Museum of Art

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Drama From the Garden: New Work by Terry Askey-Cole Gallery 54

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Carl Hoffner Exhibition Imagine

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Lynette Blake: Within and Beyond Weeks Art Gallery at Baltimore Woods

10:00 AM-10:00 PM Faces, Forms and Illusions: Works by Scott Hutchison Redhouse

10:00 AM-4:00 PM An American Vision: East Meets West Szozda Gallery

11:00 AM-5:00 PM TONY: 2012 (The Other New York) Community Folk Art Center

11:00 AM-4:00 PM life. love. time travel. Echo

11:00 AM-8:00 PM Opening: Harvest Gandee Gallery

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Sight Unseen: Stereographs from the OHA Collection, 1850-1930 Onondaga Historical Association

11:00 AM-4:00 PM TONY: 2012: "Manifest Destiny and the American West" and "Last House" Onondaga Historical Association

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Syracuse Cultural Workers 100 @ 30 Onondaga Historical Association

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Take No Prisoners: Political Cartoons Over Time and Place Onondaga Historical Association

11:00 AM Aesop's Fables Open Hand Theater

11:00 AM Dormouse Series: Pinkalicious, The Musical Rarely Done Productions (Read a review!)

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Karl Schrag: Memories and Premonitions Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:30 PM TONY: 2012 Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-4:00 PM TONY: 2012 (The Other New York) ArtRage Gallery (Read a review!)

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Lov U The Warehouse Gallery

12:00 PM-6:00 PM The Other New York (TONY): 2012 XL Projects

2:00 PM-3:00 PM Lakeside Views Fall Ghostwalk Onondaga Historical Association

2:00 PM Dormouse Series: Pinkalicious, The Musical Rarely Done Productions (Read a review!)

2:00 PM Merrily We Roll Along Syracuse University Drama Department (Read a review!)

5:00 PM Family Weekend Choral Concert Syracuse University Setnor School of Music

6:00 PM-8:00 PM Lakeside Views Fall Ghostwalk Onondaga Historical Association

6:45 PM-11:00 PM TONY 2012: Karen Brummund Urban Video Project

7:30 PM Family Weekend Instrumental Concert Syracuse University Setnor School of Music

8:00 PM Fellini Festival: La Strada (1954) ArtRage Gallery

8:00 PM Assassins Redhouse (Read a review!)

8:00 PM "Mystery Theme" Show Salt City Improv Theater

8:00 PM Merrily We Roll Along Syracuse University Drama Department (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Peaches and Crime, the Vagabond Cabaret Twist Cabaret Theatre

10:30 PM A...My Name is Alice Syracuse University Drama Department

Events for Sunday, October 7, 2012

12:00 AM-11:59 PM Windows Project: TONY 2012 The Warehouse Gallery

10:00 AM-3:00 PM TONY: 2012: Variography Erie Canal Museum

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Susan Worsham: Bittersweet/Bloodwork Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM TONY: 2012 Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-4:00 PM An American Vision: East Meets West Szozda Gallery

11:00 AM-5:00 PM Drama From the Garden: New Work by Terry Askey-Cole Gallery 54

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Harvest Gandee Gallery

11:00 AM-5:30 PM Carl Hoffner Exhibition Imagine

11:00 AM-4:00 PM TONY: 2012: "Manifest Destiny and the American West" and "Last House" Onondaga Historical Association

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Sight Unseen: Stereographs from the OHA Collection, 1850-1930 Onondaga Historical Association

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Take No Prisoners: Political Cartoons Over Time and Place Onondaga Historical Association

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Syracuse Cultural Workers 100 @ 30 Onondaga Historical Association

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Karl Schrag: Memories and Premonitions Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:30 PM TONY: 2012 Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-5:00 PM The Other New York: 2012 Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Prophecy: Peter B. Jones Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-6:00 PM The Other New York (TONY): 2012 XL Projects

2:00 PM Dormouse Series: Pinkalicious, The Musical Rarely Done Productions (Read a review!)

2:00 PM Karl Schrag and the Legacy of Atelier 17 Syracuse University Art Museum, featuring Domenic Iacono

2:00 PM Merrily We Roll Along Syracuse University Drama Department (Read a review!)

2:00 PM Greater Syracuse Honors Youth Wind Ensemble and Symphonic Band Syracuse University Setnor School of Music

3:00 PM Judicial Politics in Polarized Times University Neighbors Lecture Series, featuring Thomas Keck

4:00 PM Dormouse Series: Pinkalicious, The Musical Rarely Done Productions (Read a review!)

4:00 PM Petrarca - The Musicians' Poet Schola Cantorum of Syracuse

5:00 PM Rani Arbo, with Maria Gillard and host Jeffrey Pepper Rodgers Words and Music Songwriter Showcase

6:00 PM A...My Name is Alice Syracuse University Drama Department

8:00 PM Ott and the All Seeing I, with Govinda Westcott Theater

Events for Monday, October 8, 2012

12:00 AM-11:59 PM Windows Project: TONY 2012 The Warehouse Gallery

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Lynette Blake: Within and Beyond Weeks Art Gallery at Baltimore Woods

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Gallery Exhibit: Brendan Rose & Michael Barletta: Paper, Staple, String Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-2:00 PM TONY: 2012: Ink Geographies Point of Contact Gallery

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

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Assembly-line Architecture: Repetition and Innovation in the Work of Marcel Breuer Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Investigations Syracuse University School of Architecture

10:00 AM-5:00 PM TONY: 2012: Variography Erie Canal Museum

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Drama From the Garden: New Work by Terry Askey-Cole Gallery 54

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Carl Hoffner Exhibition Imagine

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Susan Worsham: Bittersweet/Bloodwork Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM TONY: 2012 Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-10:00 PM Faces, Forms and Illusions: Works by Scott Hutchison Redhouse

11:00 AM-5:00 PM Framed Un Framed 601 Tully

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Puerto Rican Bomba and Plena: A Graphic History La Casita Cultural Center

1:00 PM-5:00 PM Raw Revelations: The Reunion of Hand Tools and Production The Warehouse Gallery

7:30 PM United States Marine Band

8:00 PM Borgore Westcott Theater

Events for Tuesday, October 9, 2012

12:00 AM-11:59 PM Windows Project: TONY 2012 The Warehouse Gallery

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Lynette Blake: Within and Beyond Weeks Art Gallery at Baltimore Woods

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Gallery Exhibit: Brendan Rose & Michael Barletta: Paper, Staple, String Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-2:00 PM TONY: 2012: Ink Geographies Point of Contact Gallery

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

9:00 AM-7:00 PM Assembly-line Architecture: Repetition and Innovation in the Work of Marcel Breuer Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Investigations Syracuse University School of Architecture

9:00 AM-5:00 PM The dB Cultural Revolution series by Decibel Westcott Community Art Gallery

9:30 AM-6:00 PM Play on Light Edgewood Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM TONY: 2012 (The Other New York) Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-5:00 PM TONY: 2012: Variography Erie Canal Museum

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Drama From the Garden: New Work by Terry Askey-Cole Gallery 54

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Carl Hoffner Exhibition Imagine

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Susan Worsham: Bittersweet/Bloodwork Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM TONY: 2012 Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-10:00 PM Faces, Forms and Illusions: Works by Scott Hutchison Redhouse

11:00 AM-5:00 PM Framed Un Framed 601 Tully

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Karl Schrag: Memories and Premonitions Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:30 PM TONY: 2012 Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Prophecy: Peter B. Jones Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM The Other New York: 2012 Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Puerto Rican Bomba and Plena: A Graphic History La Casita Cultural Center

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Lov U The Warehouse Gallery

1:00 PM-6:00 PM life. love. time travel. Echo

1:00 PM-5:00 PM Raw Revelations: The Reunion of Hand Tools and Production The Warehouse Gallery

5:00 PM Sweet & Salt: Water and the Dutch Syracuse University School of Architecture, featuring Tracy Metz

7:00 PM One World Concert

7:30 PM Jersey Boys Broadway in Syracuse (Read a review!)

Events for Wednesday, October 10, 2012

12:00 AM-11:59 PM Windows Project: TONY 2012 The Warehouse Gallery

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Lynette Blake: Within and Beyond Weeks Art Gallery at Baltimore Woods

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Gallery Exhibit: Brendan Rose & Michael Barletta: Paper, Staple, String Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-2:00 PM TONY: 2012: Ink Geographies Point of Contact Gallery

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

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Assembly-line Architecture: Repetition and Innovation in the Work of Marcel Breuer Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Investigations Syracuse University School of Architecture

9:00 AM-5:00 PM The dB Cultural Revolution series by Decibel Westcott Community Art Gallery

9:30 AM-6:00 PM Play on Light Edgewood Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM TONY: 2012 (The Other New York) Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-5:00 PM TONY: 2012: Variography Erie Canal Museum

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Drama From the Garden: New Work by Terry Askey-Cole Gallery 54

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Carl Hoffner Exhibition Imagine

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Susan Worsham: Bittersweet/Bloodwork Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM TONY: 2012 Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Syracuse Cultural Workers 100 @ 30 Onondaga Historical Association

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Take No Prisoners: Political Cartoons Over Time and Place Onondaga Historical Association

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Sight Unseen: Stereographs from the OHA Collection, 1850-1930 Onondaga Historical Association

10:00 AM-4:00 PM TONY: 2012: "Manifest Destiny and the American West" and "Last House" Onondaga Historical Association

10:00 AM-10:00 PM Faces, Forms and Illusions: Works by Scott Hutchison Redhouse

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Altered Environments: Works of Willson Cummer and Laura Wellner Szozda Gallery (Read a review!)

11:00 AM-5:00 PM Framed Un Framed 601 Tully

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Karl Schrag: Memories and Premonitions Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:30 PM TONY: 2012 Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Prophecy: Peter B. Jones Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM The Other New York: 2012 Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Puerto Rican Bomba and Plena: A Graphic History La Casita Cultural Center

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Lov U The Warehouse Gallery

12:00 PM-6:00 PM The Other New York (TONY): 2012 XL Projects

12:15 PM Lunchtime Lectures: Gallery Talk for Karl Schrag: Memories and Premonitions Syracuse University Art Museum, featuring Domenic Iacono

12:30 PM-1:30 PM Martha Grener, flute; Gerald Zampino; Maryna Mazhukhova, piano Civic Morning Musicals

1:00 PM-6:00 PM life. love. time travel. Echo

1:00 PM-5:00 PM Raw Revelations: The Reunion of Hand Tools and Production The Warehouse Gallery

2:00 PM-7:00 PM TONY: 2012 (The Other New York) ArtRage Gallery (Read a review!)

5:30 PM Ira Sadoff Raymond Carver Reading Series

7:00 PM The Fearless Eye: TONY:2012 Artists' Talk ArtRage Gallery

7:00 PM Concert of Remembrance for Bassel Shahade Syracuse University Setnor School of Music

7:30 PM Jersey Boys Broadway in Syracuse (Read a review!)

7:30 PM Moby Dick Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

7:30 PM 350: The Most Important Number in the World University Lectures, featuring Bill McKibben

8:00 PM Assassins Redhouse (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Rebelution, with Passafire, Through the Roots Westcott Theater

9:00 PM Legends of Jazz Series: Pat Metheny Unity Band Onondaga Community College

Events for Thursday, October 11, 2012

12:00 AM-11:59 PM Windows Project: TONY 2012 The Warehouse Gallery

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Lynette Blake: Within and Beyond Weeks Art Gallery at Baltimore Woods

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Gallery Exhibit: Brendan Rose & Michael Barletta: Paper, Staple, String Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-2:00 PM TONY: 2012: Ink Geographies Point of Contact Gallery

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

9:00 AM-7:00 PM Assembly-line Architecture: Repetition and Innovation in the Work of Marcel Breuer Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Investigations Syracuse University School of Architecture

9:00 AM-5:00 PM The dB Cultural Revolution series by Decibel Westcott Community Art Gallery

9:30 AM-6:00 PM Play on Light Edgewood Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM TONY: 2012 (The Other New York) Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-5:00 PM TONY: 2012: Variography Erie Canal Museum

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Drama From the Garden: New Work by Terry Askey-Cole Gallery 54

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Carl Hoffner Exhibition Imagine

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Susan Worsham: Bittersweet/Bloodwork Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM TONY: 2012 Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Take No Prisoners: Political Cartoons Over Time and Place Onondaga Historical Association

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Syracuse Cultural Workers 100 @ 30 Onondaga Historical Association

10:00 AM-4:00 PM TONY: 2012: "Manifest Destiny and the American West" and "Last House" Onondaga Historical Association

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Sight Unseen: Stereographs from the OHA Collection, 1850-1930 Onondaga Historical Association

10:00 AM-10:00 PM Faces, Forms and Illusions: Works by Scott Hutchison Redhouse

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Altered Environments: Works of Willson Cummer and Laura Wellner Szozda Gallery (Read a review!)

11:00 AM-5:00 PM Framed Un Framed 601 Tully

11:00 AM-6:00 PM Harvest Gandee Gallery

11:00 AM-8:00 PM Karl Schrag: Memories and Premonitions Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-8:00 PM TONY: 2012 Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Prophecy: Peter B. Jones Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM The Other New York: 2012 Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Puerto Rican Bomba and Plena: A Graphic History La Casita Cultural Center

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Lov U The Warehouse Gallery

12:00 PM-6:00 PM The Other New York (TONY): 2012 XL Projects

1:00 PM-6:00 PM life. love. time travel. Echo

2:00 PM-7:00 PM TONY: 2012 (The Other New York) ArtRage Gallery (Read a review!)

6:30 PM-11:00 PM TONY 2012: Karen Brummund Urban Video Project

6:45 PM The Sound of Murder Acme Mystery Company

7:00 PM Album Release Party: Tom Bronzetti Pro Musica Divina

7:00 PM SyrFilmFest '12 Opening Night Syracuse International Film Festival, featuring Karen Black

7:00 PM Animation Program Syracuse International Film Festival

7:30 PM Jersey Boys Broadway in Syracuse (Read a review!)

7:30 PM Moby Dick Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Americana Groove Night

8:00 PM Assassins Redhouse (Read a review!)

Events for Friday, October 12, 2012

12:00 AM-11:59 PM Windows Project: TONY 2012 The Warehouse Gallery

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Lynette Blake: Within and Beyond Weeks Art Gallery at Baltimore Woods

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Gallery Exhibit: Brendan Rose & Michael Barletta: Paper, Staple, String Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-2:00 PM TONY: 2012: Ink Geographies Point of Contact Gallery

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

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Assembly-line Architecture: Repetition and Innovation in the Work of Marcel Breuer Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Investigations Syracuse University School of Architecture

9:00 AM-5:00 PM The dB Cultural Revolution series by Decibel Westcott Community Art Gallery

9:30 AM-6:00 PM Play on Light Edgewood Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM TONY: 2012 (The Other New York) Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-5:00 PM TONY: 2012: Variography Erie Canal Museum

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Drama From the Garden: New Work by Terry Askey-Cole Gallery 54

10:00 AM-8:00 PM Carl Hoffner Exhibition Imagine

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Susan Worsham: Bittersweet/Bloodwork Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-6:00 PM TONY: 2012 Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Syracuse Cultural Workers 100 @ 30 Onondaga Historical Association

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Take No Prisoners: Political Cartoons Over Time and Place Onondaga Historical Association

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Sight Unseen: Stereographs from the OHA Collection, 1850-1930 Onondaga Historical Association

10:00 AM-4:00 PM TONY: 2012: "Manifest Destiny and the American West" and "Last House" Onondaga Historical Association

10:00 AM-10:00 PM Faces, Forms and Illusions: Works by Scott Hutchison Redhouse

10:00 AM-8:00 PM Altered Environments: Works of Willson Cummer and Laura Wellner Szozda Gallery (Read a review!)

11:00 AM-5:00 PM Framed Un Framed 601 Tully

11:00 AM-6:00 PM Harvest Gandee Gallery

11:00 AM-4:30 PM Karl Schrag: Memories and Premonitions Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-4:30 PM TONY: 2012 Syracuse University Art Museum

11:15 AM Cello Recital and String Masterclass Onondaga Community College, featuring Elinor Frey, cello

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Prophecy: Peter B. Jones Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM The Other New York: 2012 Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Puerto Rican Bomba and Plena: A Graphic History La Casita Cultural Center

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Lov U The Warehouse Gallery

12:00 PM-6:00 PM The Other New York (TONY): 2012 XL Projects

1:00 PM-6:00 PM life. love. time travel. Echo

2:00 PM-7:00 PM TONY: 2012 (The Other New York) ArtRage Gallery (Read a review!)

6:00 PM-9:00 PM Jazz@Sitrus CNY Jazz Arts Foundation, featuring Michael and Anjela Lynn

6:30 PM-11:00 PM TONY 2012: Karen Brummund Urban Video Project

7:00 PM Impossibilitados: A Theatrical Performance Inspired by the Paintings of Abisay Puentes Community Folk Art Center

7:00 PM Poet Thom Ward and author Patrick Lawler Downtown Writer's Center

7:00 PM Special Event: Silent Film Classic & Music: Gold Rush Syracuse International Film Festival

7:00 PM Homecoming, Hold on Your Hand Syracuse International Film Festival

7:00 PM The Heart of Money, Solo Piano, The Fastest Matthew in the World (Nejry Chejsi Matej Na Suete), Pavilion Syracuse International Film Festival

8:00 PM Jersey Boys Broadway in Syracuse (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Assassins Redhouse (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Moby Dick Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

9:30 PM Room, The Maiden Danced to Death Syracuse International Film Festival

9:45 PM Stroke Syracuse International Film Festival, featuring Special guest Rob Nilsson

9:45 PM Max and his Brother-in-Law, Il Settimo, Girl$ Syracuse International Film Festival

11:59 PM Brew and View Screening: Five Easy Pieces Syracuse International Film Festival

Next week  >>>

Friday, October 5, 2012


Art
 

12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, October 5



Windows Project: TONY 2012
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

For this project, Jeffrey Einhorn created a site-specific installation "A Portrait of the Artist as a Giant Deflating Head" to address the fine line between performance art and sculpture while emphasizing wittily the unstable state of things or a disorder of a system.

This Window Projects exhibition is part of The Other New York: 2012, a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with 14 Syracuse partner art organizations to highlight artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 5



Lynette Blake: Within and Beyond
Weeks Art Gallery at Baltimore Woods

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

Lynette Blake's oil paintings draw the viewer in through complex layers of shape and color. The use of overlapping imagery conveys a depth that extends deep below the surface of the canvas. Objects, whether used directly or evoked by abstract shapes, float in and out of light illuminating them with a pervasive warm glow. The effect is otherworldly -- a feeling of being outside time and space is conveyed.

Blake has exhibited her work throughout the Northeast, and is currently represented locally by the Szozda Gallery in Syracuse, as well as national venues. She studied art at Brown University in Rhode Island and currently resides in Upstate NY.

More information on the Weeks Gallery at Baltimore Woods can be found at www.baltimorewoods.org.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 5



Gallery Exhibit: Brendan Rose & Michael Barletta: Paper, Staple, String
Onondaga Community College

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

"Paper, Staple, String" is a spatial installation, transforming Onondaga's Gallery into a dynamic field of suspended objects. Educational remnants (the discarded paperwork of students) are reclaimed as monochromatic pixels of a space defining cloud. This three-dimensional form transfigures as it intersects with the gallery walls, flattening and expanding against the two-dimensional surface.


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



TONY: 2012: Ink Geographies
Point of Contact Gallery

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

Feels like writing, but the artist is quick to make clear that it is not. Signs, representations ... of what? A mental process, a journey, from diverse points of origin through our individual timelines, our personal twists and turns. As a script emerges, something is set free, though it leaves a mark, an imprint. The artist's essential playground is a space to explore geometric archetypes that can only be found inside one another; all are one. A sacred mandala? Images contract and expand and there is order, not chaos. No more chaotic than life emerging from the womb, contraction, expansion; a beating heart, where life is felt, contraction, expansion...an ever-expanding universe, contracts only to further expand. We don't know how to will it into action. A similar experience with ink takes form in this experiment by Oscar Garcés. It flows from a playful doodle, "el virus," he calls it. And before you know it, connects with something else, an altered state of consciousness. Everything else disappears as it takes over.

The Point of Contact Gallery presents the first solo show by Cuban-born, Syracuse-based artist Oscar Garcés, as part of The Other New York: TONY 2012, a community-wide biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaboration among 14 venues in Syracuse. This program also commemorates the celebration of Hispanic Heritage Month at Point of Contact.

Born in Santiago, Cuba in 1987, Garcés came to the United States in 2000. During his years residing first in Florida, when he began to develop as a visual artist, Garcés received multiple recognitions, including a Golden Key Award for best portfolio by Scholastics. Later in Syracuse, Garcés won a "Best of Show" Award at the Community Folk Art Center in 2005. He has also shown his paintings at the Warehouse Gallery's Window Project and at La Casita Cultural Center Gallery.

TONY 2012: "The Other New York" seeks to highlight the work and talent of different rising artists from the Central New York area.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 5



Phonography
Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

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

Cell phone photography, featuring works of 75 Central New York and international artists. Amazing, imaginative, creative, innovative, fun photos you'll love!


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 5



Assembly-line Architecture: Repetition and Innovation in the Work of Marcel Breuer
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

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

The exhibit, curated by Teresa Harris, architectural historian and project coordinator for the Marcel Breuer Digital Archive, showcases original drawings, photographs and documents from Breuer's long career.

Like many modern architects, Marcel Breuer found inspiration in the repetition characteristic of industrial processes, often relying on modular units or a standard kit of parts to create his buildings and interiors. The limits imposed by these systems stimulated subtle formal and spatial innovation so that no two designs were exactly alike, despite common components.


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 5



Investigations
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
Slocum Hall Gallery
Syracuse University campus, Syracuse

An exhibition of the work and design process of Stephan Jaklitsch and Mark Gardner through sketches, models, renderings, construction drawings, and photographs of six projects. Their work addresses specific conditions of site, use, the psychology of experience, sustainability, techniques of construction craft in detail, and materiality of building.

Jaklitsch/Gardner Architects (J/GA) is an award-winning NYC-based design practice that focuses on urban scale projects, buildings, interiors, and objects. Award-winning projects include the Marc Jacobs Tokyo Flagship Building (2010); a bike rack for the NYC Dept. of Transportation that was exhibited at the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum (2008); and the Marc Jacobs International Showroom (2012).


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9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, October 5



Play on Light
Edgewood Gallery

Price: Free
Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd., Syracuse

Adriana Meiss: Pastel landscapes
John Franklin: Turned wood and sculptural vessels
Paul Riccardi: Pastel florals and still-lifes
Judy McCumber: Silver and gemstone jewelry


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 5



TONY: 2012 (The Other New York)
Community Folk Art Center

Price: Free
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

The Other New York: 2012 is a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaboration among 12 art organizations in Syracuse. This ambitious project aims to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties. The project will offer diverse arts venues and outdoor public spaces for contemporary creative expression on a scale not before seen in Syracuse. In addition, TONY: 2012 demonstrates the power of artistic partnerships to boost public awareness of the arts by presenting opportunities for the community to connect with exhibitions, programs, and events offered simultaneously throughout the city.

TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with ArtRage, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Punto de Contacto/Point of Contact, Red House Arts Center, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, and the City of Syracuse. Alternative art spaces in the form of freight containers will provide temporary exhibition/installation sites. The containers will be strategically located in the city to link arts venues and encourage visitors to walk and experience art along the way.

Community Folk Art Center TONY 2012 featured artists are Elizabeth Leader, Michael Moody, Abisay Puentes, Sandra Stephens, who each use their art to engage in a larger conversation about significant but often overlooked social issues, including racial identity and urban decay.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 5



TONY: 2012: Variography
Erie Canal Museum

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

This exhibit features Buffalo artist Michael Bosworth's "Variography" -- a pair of installations, one inside the historic Syracuse Weighlock Building and the other outside and directly across the former Erie Canal (now Erie Blvd.) from the Weighlock. Inside there will be four-foot tall brick columns containing magic-lantern projectors, while outside will stand a camera obscurae built of cement on heavy wooden tripods.

Michael Bosworth is a nationally exhibiting artist and a professor in the photography department of Villa Maria College. He received his M.F.A. from the University of New Mexico, a B.F.A. and B.A. at UB. His commissioned public art projects include Fluid Culture, Main Street/Art Street, and Herd About Buffalo.

The Erie Canal Museum is proud to be a part of The Other New York: 2012 (TONY: 2012), an unprecedented community-wide, multi-venue contemporary art exhibition. TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with ArtRage, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Onondaga Historical Association, Point of Contact, Rosamond Gifford Zoo, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, City of Syracuse and XL Projects.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 5



Drama From the Garden: New Work by Terry Askey-Cole
Gallery 54

Gallery 54
54 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

Terry Askey-Cole brings her love of nature and the outdoors to all her new pieces inspired by her beautiful gardens.


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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, October 5



Carl Hoffner Exhibition
Imagine

Imagine
38 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

An exhibition of limited-edition color lithographs and digital paintings by Fayetteville artist Carl Hoffner.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 5



Susan Worsham: Bittersweet/Bloodwork
Light Work Gallery

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

When Susan Worsham was just 18, her brother took his own life after severing his spinal cord in a motorcycle accident. As a young girl she had already lost her father to a heart attack, and finally in 2004, she lost her mother as well. In the words of Worsham, "Shortly after my mother passed I came across a set of antique veterinary slides. They were some of the most interesting things that I had ever seen. I framed ninety of them in a long wooden frame resembling the shape of the slide itself. It was the first piece of art that I made after my mother died. I called the piece a watercolor because of the collection of pastel colors, but it was also a sort of poem when you got close and read the titles ... Rabbit's Lung, Fowl's Spleen, and even Human Umbilical Cord. They seemed to hold beauty and death at the same time."

Worsham went on to photograph her old childhood home as well as her oldest neighbor, Margaret Daniel. Margaret is one of the last remaining threads from Worsham's childhood and was the last person to see her brother alive. She made him her homemade bread, and he finished the whole loaf before he shot himself. The story came full circle one day when Margaret brought out her dissection kit and microscope slides. She had been a biology teacher and was holding on to the same sort of slides that fascinated Worsham. Margaret's microscope and slides have since become a metaphor for Worsham's desire to look deeper into the landscape of her childhood--from the flora and fauna to the feelings, Margaret calls it "blood work."

In addition to Worsham's touching photographs made in and around Virginia, this exhibition features a selection of Margaret's dissection tools alongside her microscope, as well as audio recordings of their various conversations about plants, life, and death. All together, the photographs and accompaniments in Bittersweet/Bloodwork speak of the poetry of childhood, nature, discovery, love, and loss.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 5



TONY: 2012
Light Work Gallery

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

Light Work is pleased to announce the exhibition "The Other New York: 2012," featuring the photographic work of Sarah Averill, Bang-Geul Han, Mark McLoughlin, Jan Nagle, and Matthew Walker. This exhibition is part of a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaborion among 14 art organizations in Syracuse. This ambitious project aims to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 5



Take No Prisoners: Political Cartoons Over Time and Place
Onondaga Historical Association

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

Three well-known Central New York political cartoonists, Joe Glisson, Tim Atseff, and Frank Cammuso, are the featured cartoonists for an exhibition entitled "Take No Prisoners: Political Cartoons Over Time and Place." With insightful humor, these artists and their historic predecessors produced a wide variety of editorial cartoons that illustrated important issues of their time. Starting with cartoons from the Civil War era through the present day, "Take No Prisoners" is an opportunity to experience historic subjects as the current events they once were, and to see how election issues of the past compare with those of the present-day.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 5



Syracuse Cultural Workers 100 @ 30
Onondaga Historical Association

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

100 posters celebrating 30 years. Since 1982, SCW has published and distributed over 700 posters across North America and a bit on other continents. This selection of 100 titles represents the best, the boldest, and the oldest.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 5



TONY: 2012: "Manifest Destiny and the American West" and "Last House"
Onondaga Historical Association

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

These exhibits are mounted as part of the The Other New York (TONY): 2012, Syracuse's art biennial. OHA's TONY: 2012 exhibits are artistically presented interpretations of dynamic social trends that are part of the historic legacy of Central New York.

In a three-dimensional display employing nearly 1,000 images set in glass jars, "Manifest Destiny and the American West," an exhibit by Buffalo artist Robert Hirsch, asks the visitor to think about how our nation's geographic progression across the continent has shaped American culture. The desire to exploit the salt brine reserves on Onondaga Lake contributed to a westward migration of settlers across Central New York in the post-American Revolution era, while the construction of the Erie Canal enhanced this movement through the 19th century and enabled many travelers to reach lands in the farther reaches of the American continent.

"Last House" is a multi-channel video installation by media artist Carl Lee that explores the aesthetics and means of a house demolition in Buffalo. Cities like Buffalo and Syracuse are faced with a large number of abandoned houses. This video asks us to think about what we gain and lose in demolishing them. This installation will be accompanied by three paintings by Western New York artist Amy Greenan of vacant houses in Syracuse awaiting an uncertain future, including "Not Here, Not Now," her interpretation of 711 Tully Street, which seems poised to have a different fate on Syracuse's Near West Side than that if the house in Last House.

Onondaga Historical Association is proud to be one of 14 Central New York venues for TONY: 2012. TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with ArtRage, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Onondaga Historical Association, Point of Contact, Rosamond Gifford Zoo, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, City of Syracuse, and XL Projects.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 5



Sight Unseen: Stereographs from the OHA Collection, 1850-1930
Onondaga Historical Association

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

Since OHA's inception, it has amassed a collection of over 2,000 stereographs, or stereo views, of Onondaga County and beyond. Archived in the research holdings, these 3-D photographs have never before been exhibited. Guest curator Colleen Woolpert offers an overview of the collection, providing insight into the little known history of stereo photography while taking us back into the past with the aid of exhibition stereoscopes. The exhibit includes Syracuse views taken by local photographers as well as nationally-marketed views, historic stereoscopes, books, and related 3-D ephemera. It also looks at the combined industries of photography, publishing, manufacturing and marketing that contributed to the enormous popularity of the stereograph.


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10:00 AM - 10:00 PM, October 5



Faces, Forms and Illusions: Works by Scott Hutchison
Redhouse

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

Scott Hutchison is a painter living in the Washington DC metro area. His work combines contemporary realism and animation. An exploration of the human figure continues to be the leitmotiv of Hutchison's work with a long-standing interest in self portraiture.

Hutchison says:
"My animations combine traditional painting and drawing techniques with digital technology to create animated portraits, which are displayed on small LCD panels, or projected, large-scale. Dozens of individual stills portray my face, changing only slightly from one image to the next. When the images are unified digitally, an animation is created. Each video is comprised of multiple painted or drawn self-portraits that, although similar, possess slight variations of color and treatment. When animated, the paint and mark move across the surface, resulting in a portrait that is in constant flux."


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 5



An American Vision: East Meets West
Szozda Gallery

Price: Free
Szozda Gallery
Delavan Center, 501 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

The fall season opens with new works by two popular local artists, Phil Parsons and Bob Niedzwiecki, who reveal the striking beauty between vastly different American landscapes of lush vegetation versus dry earth.

For Parsons, this show represents the latest installment of his familiar "Roadside Series," in which rural Central New York is prominent. This series of new images is done with a commitment to the realist movement, somewhat a departure for Parsons who says he is "not exclusively a traditional painter."

New works by realist painter Niedzwiecki deviate from the gentle, subtle Central New York landscapes for which he is typically known. A vacation return to the Southwest became the inspiration for capturing the beauty of landscapes that he fell in love with long before while living in Colorado and Arizona.


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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 5



Framed Un Framed
601 Tully

601 Tully St.
Syracuse

An exhibition of artists with a dual practice, featuring Abby Carter, Samantha Harmon, Lori Hawke, Stephanie Koenig, Lynette K Stephenson, and Marion Wilson.



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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, October 5



Karl Schrag: Memories and Premonitions
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

The Syracuse University Art Galleries is celebrating the career and life of Karl Schrag, American painter and printmaker, who would have been 100 years old this year. "Karl Schrag: Memories and Premonitions" is the first major examination of the artist's work since his death in 1995. The exhibition includes 70 original works of art by the influential artist, including paintings, prints and drawings.

Syracuse University has had a long and rewarding association with Karl Schrag and his family. It began in 1962 with a gift of a gouache painting titled "Coast in Autumn." Later the relationship grew with the first of numerous exhibitions, more gifts of artwork, and occasional lectures to students in the University's School of Art. Some 50 years later, S.U.'s art collection is much richer because of the 250-plus Karl Schrag artworks we maintain, and the continued support of Schrag Family.

2012 is also the centenary year of Karl Schrag's birth and gives us an opportunity to reinvestigate the talent, imagination, and sensitivity Schrag brought to his landscapes, still-life paintings, and portraits. A master of color, light, composition, and draftsmanship, Schrag captures nature and its great forces through an investigation of the lasting impressions each of us retain through experience. He engages his viewer with subtle mark making as well as with the bold calligraphic strokes so often associated with his work. His palette of almost Fauvist intensity adds dimension and passion to the landscapes he created.

Schrag's art career spanned more than 60 years and he had strong ties to the New York City art scene. After studying at the Art Students League, he joined S.W. Hayter's prestigious printmaking studio Atelier 17, working alongside artists Miró, Chagall and Jackson Pollock. Schrag was named director of the Atelier in 1950 and later began a long teaching career at Cooper Union, where he taught drawing and graphic arts from 1954-1968. Schrag had a direct impact on many of his students, including the Syracuse University-based artist Jerome Witkin. A student of Schrag at Cooper Union and a well-established contemporary artist, Witkin has commented on Schrags masterful handling of the landscape, and the evocative power of his vision.

The art selected for this exhibit will convey the artist's ability to see the landscape as if for the first time, the surprise of that special view, the recognition of his ability to feel wonder when looking at nature or figures, and the reward associated with seeing the world through his eyes.


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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, October 5



TONY: 2012
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

The Other New York: 2012 (Tony: 2012) is an ambitious project that aims to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties. The project offers diverse arts venues and outdoor public spaces for contemporary creative expression on a scale not before seen in Syracuse. In addition, TONY: 2012 demonstrates the power of artistic partnerships to boost public awareness of the arts by presenting opportunities for the community to connect with exhibitions, programs, and events offered simultaneously throughout the city.

The artists included in the SUArt Galleries TONY: 2012 are Tammy Brackett, Juan Cruz, Sara Di Donato, Matthew Glaysher, Amy Greenan, Sue Huggins Leopard, Barbara Page, James Skvarch.

The SUArt Galleries is one of 14 venues participating in this citywide celebration of the visual arts. Please take the time to visit the exhibitions at the other TONY venues to see the wealth of talent that resides and works upstate.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, October 5



Prophecy: Peter B. Jones
Everson Museum of Art

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

"Prophecy" is a timely exhibition pertaining to Indigenous prophecies. By incorporating themes of ecology, creation, demise and the future according to the Mayan calendar, traditional Iroquois teachings and other cultural beliefs, Jones provides a visual representation of the foretold truths.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, October 5



The Other New York: 2012
Everson Museum of Art

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

The Other New York: 2012 is a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaboration among 12 art organizations in Syracuse. This ambitious project aims to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties. The project will offer diverse arts venues and outdoor public spaces for contemporary creative expression on a scale not before seen in Syracuse. In addition, TONY: 2012 demonstrates the power of artistic partnerships to boost public awareness of the arts by presenting opportunities for the community to connect with exhibitions, programs, and events offered simultaneously throughout the city.

TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with ArtRage-The Norton Putter Gallery, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Onondaga Historical Association, Punto de Contacto/Point of Contact, Red House Arts Center, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, City of Syracuse and XL Projects.

Alternative art spaces in the form of freight containers will provide temporary exhibition/installation sites. The containers will be strategically located in the city to link arts venues and encourage visitors to walk and experience art along the way.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, October 5



Puerto Rican Bomba and Plena: A Graphic History
La Casita Cultural Center

Price: Free
La Casita Cultural Center
109 Otisco St., Syracuse

The exhibit presents the works of nine Puerto Rican master artists who were commissioned to create screen prints to capture the spirit of the annual Bomba and Plena Festivals held in Puerto Rico. Their posters have been collected and preserved by the Institute of Puerto Rican Culture in San Juan.

Featured artists are José R. Alicea, Luis Alonso, Luis Germán Cajigas, Jesús Cardona, Sixto Cotto, David Goitia, Samuel Lind, Luis Maisonet Ramos, and Nelson Sambolin.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, October 5



Lov U
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

"Lov U" is a multimedia installation by Senga Nengudi.

Colorado-based Senga Nengudi is a key figure of the Black Arts Movement in the 1970s and 1980s. Known primarily for performance-based art installations, her work focuses on movement and the human body, is multidisciplinary in nature and international in scope, with cultural references to Africa, the African Diaspora, and Asia. For her multimedia, performance-based exhibition "Lov U," Nengudi explores the physical senses of being human, and includes photographs and video to reflect on the essence of love. Drawn to discarded, everyday materials, the ephemerality of Nengudi's work is a metaphor for life's transience.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, October 5



The Other New York (TONY): 2012
XL Projects

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

XL Projects will present the work of seven artists selected for "The Other New York (TONY): 2012," a communitywide, multi-venue contemporary art exhibition featuring artists currently living in New York State outside of the New York City metropolitan area.

The artists showing work at XL Projects -- Michael Barletta, Daniel Buckingham, Jay Carrier, Meredith Davenport, Kara Daving, Tom DeLooza, and Fernando Orellana -- are among the 63 artists selected from 235 submissions for TONY: 2012. The work that will be on view at XL includes large sculpture, video, photography, kinetic sculpture, large-scale painting, and a large window graphic across the front of the venue.

TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with 14 art institutions and cultural organizations in Syracuse: ArtRage, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Onondaga Historical Association, Point of Contact, Rosamond Gifford Zoo, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, City of Syracuse, and XL Projects.

For more information, contact Andrew Havenhand at ahavenhand@yahoo.com. XL Projects may be contacted at 315-442-2542 during gallery hours. For more information about TONY: 2012 and the other exhibiting artists and venues, visit everson.org.


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1:00 PM - 6:00 PM, October 5



life. love. time travel.
Echo

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

Group show of works by over 20 artists.


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1:00 PM - 5:00 PM, October 5



Raw Revelations: The Reunion of Hand Tools and Production
The Warehouse Gallery

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

In recent years, the connection between process and product has slowly separated, creating a rift between the two. Consumers often do not know who is designing and constructing the products they buy. However, a rising movement is reuniting the experience of creating something by hand and the finished product. Craftspeople worldwide are continuing the tradition of working with their hands and their cherished hand tools, forging a connection with what they make.

This new exhibition illuminates the idea of this connection between history, design and craftsmanship through a sensory experience for the viewers. The show invites the public to learn about the history of hand tools and woodworking, witness part of the process of creating a wooden stool by hand and find out how to reconnect the process of creating something with the final product.

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


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2:00 PM - 7:00 PM, October 5



TONY: 2012 (The Other New York)
ArtRage Gallery

Price: Free
ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave., Syracuse

The Everson Biennial, titled "The Other New York: 2012," is being exhibited in community art galleries across Syracuse this year. ArtRage is honored to participate by exhibiting the work of four artists chosen in collaboration with the Everson Museum.

Ben Altman, Neil Chowdhury, Bob Gates and Paul Pearce, the four photographers whose works comprise this exhibit, present work that, while distinctive, shares a key characteristic. All are documentary photographers who are a bit wary of being seen as truth tellers. Fully understanding that the "objective photograph" is a myth, their photographic work -- both in the process of its creation and the images presented -- casts into doubt our traditional notions of documentation, objectivity and veracity. Nonetheless, each photographer is visualizing a certain truth, which may be one we do not know, or one that we prefer to avoid knowing. Participating in the artist's unflinching gaze, we become complicit witnesses to situations -- torture, poverty, social class, and the effects of war -- often conveniently rendered invisible.

Read a review!


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6:45 PM - 11:00 PM, October 5



TONY 2012: Karen Brummund
Urban Video Project

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

The Everson is I.M. Pei's first museum commission. His art museums are commonly seen as art objects for art objects. They are sculptures in the landscape. Shortly after the Everson, Pei built the Johnson Museum of Art in Ithaca. In this site-specific video installation, images of the form and materials of both art museums are projected onto the Everson Museum. The images capture the light, surfaces, and depth of the architecture. The video uses images from two different buildings, analyzing how Pei's ideas bridge individual communities. These disparate places are abstractly connected through the architect's development. The plaza is not only infused with the presence of the Pei's forms, but also the conversation that takes place through his practice.

This video by Karen Brummund is part of The Other New York: 2012, a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaboration among 14 art organizations in Syracuse. This ambitious project aims
to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York.

Video projection begins at dusk.


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Lecture
 

6:00 PM - 8:00 PM, October 5



Lakeside Views Fall Ghostwalk
Onondaga Historical Association

Price: $10 members, $12 non-members (reservations required)
Village of Liverpool
Liverpool

Take an autumn stroll into the past to meet those spirited individuals who are a part of the history of Onondaga Lake and its picturesque lakeside village. Tours leave every 15 minutes.

For reservations, phone 315-428-1864, ext. 312.


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Music
 

5:00 PM - 6:30 PM, October 5



Bomba and Plena Music
La Casita Cultural Center

La Casita Cultural Center
109 Otisco St., Syracuse


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7:30 PM, October 5



Apollo & Dafne
NYS Baroque

Price: $25 regular, $20 seniors, $10 college students, children free
First Unitarian Universalist Society of Syracuse
109 Waring Rd. (at the corner of Nottingham Rd.), Dewitt

Telemann Ouverture-suite in B-flat major from Tafelmusik, Production III, TWV 55:B1
Handel Tra le fiamme, HWV 170
Handel Apollo e Dafne, HWV 122

Performers include Laura Heimes, soprano; Jesse Blumberg, baritone; Geoffrey Burgess and Debra Nagy, oboes; Stephanie Corwin, bassoon; Julie Andrijeski and Boel Gidholm, violins; Daniel Elyar, viola; David Morris, cello; Heather Miller Lardin, double bass; Deborah Fox, theorbo; Leon Schelhase, harpsichord


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8:00 PM, October 5



Rod MacDonald
Folkus Project

Price: $15
May Memorial Unitarian Society
3800 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

A Rod MacDonald concert is an intimate, inspirational and uplifting experience. From the moment he begins to sing, he grabs his audience and doesn't let go. MacDonald is a gifted vocalist and an engaging entertainer, whose easygoing demeanor creates a warmth and sincerity that quickly builds an intimate rapport with his audiences. Often humorous, sometimes reckless, frequently evocative, his music is infectious and always compelling.


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8:00 PM, October 5



Chris Trapper Live!

Price: $15
Jazz Central
441 E. Washington St., Syracuse

Singer-songwriter Chris Trapper previews new material from his Few and Far Between release, which features duets with Colin Hay from Australian band Men at Work and Rob Thomas.


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9:00 PM, October 5



New Riders of the Purple Sage
Westcott Theater

Westcott Theater
524 Westcott St., Syracuse


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Theater
 

8:00 PM, October 5



Assassins
Redhouse

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

This Sondheim musical explores the history of presidential assassination in America, from John Wilkes Booth to John Hinckley Jr. Assassins explores how society interprets the American Dream, marginalizes outsiders, and rewrites and sanitizes its collective history. A perfect evening of theatre that examines the state of contemporary politics during this election season. Music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim; book by John Weidman.

There will be a talkback session following each performance.

Read a Review!


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8:00 PM, October 5



Merrily We Roll Along
Syracuse University Drama Department
Brian Cimmet, director

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

Stephen Sondheim and George Furth's legendary musical, Merrily We Roll Along, charts the rise of a songwriting team during the years of Sondheim's own young career. Starting in 1976 and running backward in time to 1955, this lively musical focuses on three individuals whose friendship is tested by time, events, ambition and fate. A masterly work by a master composer, Merrily We Roll Along features some of Sondheim's most brilliant and bruising songs, including "Not a Day Goes By," "Old Friends," "Our Time," and "Opening Doors."

Music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim, book by George Furth based on the play Merrily We Roll Along by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart.

Read a Review!


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10:30 PM, October 5



A...My Name is Alice
Syracuse University Drama Department

Price: Free
Sutton Pavillion, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse


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Saturday, October 6, 2012


Art
 

12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, October 6



Windows Project: TONY 2012
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

For this project, Jeffrey Einhorn created a site-specific installation "A Portrait of the Artist as a Giant Deflating Head" to address the fine line between performance art and sculpture while emphasizing wittily the unstable state of things or a disorder of a system.

This Window Projects exhibition is part of The Other New York: 2012, a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with 14 Syracuse partner art organizations to highlight artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties.


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10:00 AM - 2:00 PM, October 6



Play on Light
Edgewood Gallery

Price: Free
Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd., Syracuse

Adriana Meiss: Pastel landscapes
John Franklin: Turned wood and sculptural vessels
Paul Riccardi: Pastel florals and still-lifes
Judy McCumber: Silver and gemstone jewelry


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 6



TONY: 2012: Variography
Erie Canal Museum

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

This exhibit features Buffalo artist Michael Bosworth's "Variography" -- a pair of installations, one inside the historic Syracuse Weighlock Building and the other outside and directly across the former Erie Canal (now Erie Blvd.) from the Weighlock. Inside there will be four-foot tall brick columns containing magic-lantern projectors, while outside will stand a camera obscurae built of cement on heavy wooden tripods.

Michael Bosworth is a nationally exhibiting artist and a professor in the photography department of Villa Maria College. He received his M.F.A. from the University of New Mexico, a B.F.A. and B.A. at UB. His commissioned public art projects include Fluid Culture, Main Street/Art Street, and Herd About Buffalo.

The Erie Canal Museum is proud to be a part of The Other New York: 2012 (TONY: 2012), an unprecedented community-wide, multi-venue contemporary art exhibition. TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with ArtRage, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Onondaga Historical Association, Point of Contact, Rosamond Gifford Zoo, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, City of Syracuse and XL Projects.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 6



The Other New York: 2012
Everson Museum of Art

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

The Other New York: 2012 is a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaboration among 12 art organizations in Syracuse. This ambitious project aims to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties. The project will offer diverse arts venues and outdoor public spaces for contemporary creative expression on a scale not before seen in Syracuse. In addition, TONY: 2012 demonstrates the power of artistic partnerships to boost public awareness of the arts by presenting opportunities for the community to connect with exhibitions, programs, and events offered simultaneously throughout the city.

TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with ArtRage-The Norton Putter Gallery, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Onondaga Historical Association, Punto de Contacto/Point of Contact, Red House Arts Center, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, City of Syracuse and XL Projects.

Alternative art spaces in the form of freight containers will provide temporary exhibition/installation sites. The containers will be strategically located in the city to link arts venues and encourage visitors to walk and experience art along the way.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 6



Prophecy: Peter B. Jones
Everson Museum of Art

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

"Prophecy" is a timely exhibition pertaining to Indigenous prophecies. By incorporating themes of ecology, creation, demise and the future according to the Mayan calendar, traditional Iroquois teachings and other cultural beliefs, Jones provides a visual representation of the foretold truths.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 6



Drama From the Garden: New Work by Terry Askey-Cole
Gallery 54

Gallery 54
54 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

Terry Askey-Cole brings her love of nature and the outdoors to all her new pieces inspired by her beautiful gardens.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 6



Carl Hoffner Exhibition
Imagine

Imagine
38 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

An exhibition of limited-edition color lithographs and digital paintings by Fayetteville artist Carl Hoffner.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 6



Lynette Blake: Within and Beyond
Weeks Art Gallery at Baltimore Woods

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

Lynette Blake's oil paintings draw the viewer in through complex layers of shape and color. The use of overlapping imagery conveys a depth that extends deep below the surface of the canvas. Objects, whether used directly or evoked by abstract shapes, float in and out of light illuminating them with a pervasive warm glow. The effect is otherworldly -- a feeling of being outside time and space is conveyed.

Blake has exhibited her work throughout the Northeast, and is currently represented locally by the Szozda Gallery in Syracuse, as well as national venues. She studied art at Brown University in Rhode Island and currently resides in Upstate NY.

More information on the Weeks Gallery at Baltimore Woods can be found at www.baltimorewoods.org.


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10:00 AM - 10:00 PM, October 6



Faces, Forms and Illusions: Works by Scott Hutchison
Redhouse

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

Scott Hutchison is a painter living in the Washington DC metro area. His work combines contemporary realism and animation. An exploration of the human figure continues to be the leitmotiv of Hutchison's work with a long-standing interest in self portraiture.

Hutchison says:
"My animations combine traditional painting and drawing techniques with digital technology to create animated portraits, which are displayed on small LCD panels, or projected, large-scale. Dozens of individual stills portray my face, changing only slightly from one image to the next. When the images are unified digitally, an animation is created. Each video is comprised of multiple painted or drawn self-portraits that, although similar, possess slight variations of color and treatment. When animated, the paint and mark move across the surface, resulting in a portrait that is in constant flux."


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 6



An American Vision: East Meets West
Szozda Gallery

Price: Free
Szozda Gallery
Delavan Center, 501 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

The fall season opens with new works by two popular local artists, Phil Parsons and Bob Niedzwiecki, who reveal the striking beauty between vastly different American landscapes of lush vegetation versus dry earth.

For Parsons, this show represents the latest installment of his familiar "Roadside Series," in which rural Central New York is prominent. This series of new images is done with a commitment to the realist movement, somewhat a departure for Parsons who says he is "not exclusively a traditional painter."

New works by realist painter Niedzwiecki deviate from the gentle, subtle Central New York landscapes for which he is typically known. A vacation return to the Southwest became the inspiration for capturing the beauty of landscapes that he fell in love with long before while living in Colorado and Arizona.


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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 6



TONY: 2012 (The Other New York)
Community Folk Art Center

Price: Free
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

The Other New York: 2012 is a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaboration among 12 art organizations in Syracuse. This ambitious project aims to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties. The project will offer diverse arts venues and outdoor public spaces for contemporary creative expression on a scale not before seen in Syracuse. In addition, TONY: 2012 demonstrates the power of artistic partnerships to boost public awareness of the arts by presenting opportunities for the community to connect with exhibitions, programs, and events offered simultaneously throughout the city.

TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with ArtRage, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Punto de Contacto/Point of Contact, Red House Arts Center, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, and the City of Syracuse. Alternative art spaces in the form of freight containers will provide temporary exhibition/installation sites. The containers will be strategically located in the city to link arts venues and encourage visitors to walk and experience art along the way.

Community Folk Art Center TONY 2012 featured artists are Elizabeth Leader, Michael Moody, Abisay Puentes, Sandra Stephens, who each use their art to engage in a larger conversation about significant but often overlooked social issues, including racial identity and urban decay.


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 6



life. love. time travel.
Echo

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

Group show of works by over 20 artists.


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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, October 6



Opening: Harvest
Gandee Gallery

Gandee Gallery
7846 Main St., Fabius

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

A group exhibition of Central New York artists which explores the inherit beauty of food and farming. It is during this time of year that the fruits of a farmer's labor are most appreciated, and preparation for winter, a time of hibernation and dormancy in the natural world, commences. The artists in Harvest celebrate this annual transition. The show will include photography, painting, pastel, and ceramics. Participating artists include Lisa Barker, Bob Gates, Wendy Harris, Jeremy Randall, Lucie Wellner, and Jamie Young.


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 6



Sight Unseen: Stereographs from the OHA Collection, 1850-1930
Onondaga Historical Association

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

Since OHA's inception, it has amassed a collection of over 2,000 stereographs, or stereo views, of Onondaga County and beyond. Archived in the research holdings, these 3-D photographs have never before been exhibited. Guest curator Colleen Woolpert offers an overview of the collection, providing insight into the little known history of stereo photography while taking us back into the past with the aid of exhibition stereoscopes. The exhibit includes Syracuse views taken by local photographers as well as nationally-marketed views, historic stereoscopes, books, and related 3-D ephemera. It also looks at the combined industries of photography, publishing, manufacturing and marketing that contributed to the enormous popularity of the stereograph.


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 6



TONY: 2012: "Manifest Destiny and the American West" and "Last House"
Onondaga Historical Association

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

These exhibits are mounted as part of the The Other New York (TONY): 2012, Syracuse's art biennial. OHA's TONY: 2012 exhibits are artistically presented interpretations of dynamic social trends that are part of the historic legacy of Central New York.

In a three-dimensional display employing nearly 1,000 images set in glass jars, "Manifest Destiny and the American West," an exhibit by Buffalo artist Robert Hirsch, asks the visitor to think about how our nation's geographic progression across the continent has shaped American culture. The desire to exploit the salt brine reserves on Onondaga Lake contributed to a westward migration of settlers across Central New York in the post-American Revolution era, while the construction of the Erie Canal enhanced this movement through the 19th century and enabled many travelers to reach lands in the farther reaches of the American continent.

"Last House" is a multi-channel video installation by media artist Carl Lee that explores the aesthetics and means of a house demolition in Buffalo. Cities like Buffalo and Syracuse are faced with a large number of abandoned houses. This video asks us to think about what we gain and lose in demolishing them. This installation will be accompanied by three paintings by Western New York artist Amy Greenan of vacant houses in Syracuse awaiting an uncertain future, including "Not Here, Not Now," her interpretation of 711 Tully Street, which seems poised to have a different fate on Syracuse's Near West Side than that if the house in Last House.

Onondaga Historical Association is proud to be one of 14 Central New York venues for TONY: 2012. TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with ArtRage, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Onondaga Historical Association, Point of Contact, Rosamond Gifford Zoo, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, City of Syracuse, and XL Projects.


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 6



Syracuse Cultural Workers 100 @ 30
Onondaga Historical Association

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

100 posters celebrating 30 years. Since 1982, SCW has published and distributed over 700 posters across North America and a bit on other continents. This selection of 100 titles represents the best, the boldest, and the oldest.


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 6



Take No Prisoners: Political Cartoons Over Time and Place
Onondaga Historical Association

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

Three well-known Central New York political cartoonists, Joe Glisson, Tim Atseff, and Frank Cammuso, are the featured cartoonists for an exhibition entitled "Take No Prisoners: Political Cartoons Over Time and Place." With insightful humor, these artists and their historic predecessors produced a wide variety of editorial cartoons that illustrated important issues of their time. Starting with cartoons from the Civil War era through the present day, "Take No Prisoners" is an opportunity to experience historic subjects as the current events they once were, and to see how election issues of the past compare with those of the present-day.


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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, October 6



Karl Schrag: Memories and Premonitions
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

The Syracuse University Art Galleries is celebrating the career and life of Karl Schrag, American painter and printmaker, who would have been 100 years old this year. "Karl Schrag: Memories and Premonitions" is the first major examination of the artist's work since his death in 1995. The exhibition includes 70 original works of art by the influential artist, including paintings, prints and drawings.

Syracuse University has had a long and rewarding association with Karl Schrag and his family. It began in 1962 with a gift of a gouache painting titled "Coast in Autumn." Later the relationship grew with the first of numerous exhibitions, more gifts of artwork, and occasional lectures to students in the University's School of Art. Some 50 years later, S.U.'s art collection is much richer because of the 250-plus Karl Schrag artworks we maintain, and the continued support of Schrag Family.

2012 is also the centenary year of Karl Schrag's birth and gives us an opportunity to reinvestigate the talent, imagination, and sensitivity Schrag brought to his landscapes, still-life paintings, and portraits. A master of color, light, composition, and draftsmanship, Schrag captures nature and its great forces through an investigation of the lasting impressions each of us retain through experience. He engages his viewer with subtle mark making as well as with the bold calligraphic strokes so often associated with his work. His palette of almost Fauvist intensity adds dimension and passion to the landscapes he created.

Schrag's art career spanned more than 60 years and he had strong ties to the New York City art scene. After studying at the Art Students League, he joined S.W. Hayter's prestigious printmaking studio Atelier 17, working alongside artists Miró, Chagall and Jackson Pollock. Schrag was named director of the Atelier in 1950 and later began a long teaching career at Cooper Union, where he taught drawing and graphic arts from 1954-1968. Schrag had a direct impact on many of his students, including the Syracuse University-based artist Jerome Witkin. A student of Schrag at Cooper Union and a well-established contemporary artist, Witkin has commented on Schrags masterful handling of the landscape, and the evocative power of his vision.

The art selected for this exhibit will convey the artist's ability to see the landscape as if for the first time, the surprise of that special view, the recognition of his ability to feel wonder when looking at nature or figures, and the reward associated with seeing the world through his eyes.


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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, October 6



TONY: 2012
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

The Other New York: 2012 (Tony: 2012) is an ambitious project that aims to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties. The project offers diverse arts venues and outdoor public spaces for contemporary creative expression on a scale not before seen in Syracuse. In addition, TONY: 2012 demonstrates the power of artistic partnerships to boost public awareness of the arts by presenting opportunities for the community to connect with exhibitions, programs, and events offered simultaneously throughout the city.

The artists included in the SUArt Galleries TONY: 2012 are Tammy Brackett, Juan Cruz, Sara Di Donato, Matthew Glaysher, Amy Greenan, Sue Huggins Leopard, Barbara Page, James Skvarch.

The SUArt Galleries is one of 14 venues participating in this citywide celebration of the visual arts. Please take the time to visit the exhibitions at the other TONY venues to see the wealth of talent that resides and works upstate.


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12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, October 6



TONY: 2012 (The Other New York)
ArtRage Gallery

Price: Free
ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave., Syracuse

The Everson Biennial, titled "The Other New York: 2012," is being exhibited in community art galleries across Syracuse this year. ArtRage is honored to participate by exhibiting the work of four artists chosen in collaboration with the Everson Museum.

Ben Altman, Neil Chowdhury, Bob Gates and Paul Pearce, the four photographers whose works comprise this exhibit, present work that, while distinctive, shares a key characteristic. All are documentary photographers who are a bit wary of being seen as truth tellers. Fully understanding that the "objective photograph" is a myth, their photographic work -- both in the process of its creation and the images presented -- casts into doubt our traditional notions of documentation, objectivity and veracity. Nonetheless, each photographer is visualizing a certain truth, which may be one we do not know, or one that we prefer to avoid knowing. Participating in the artist's unflinching gaze, we become complicit witnesses to situations -- torture, poverty, social class, and the effects of war -- often conveniently rendered invisible.

Read a review!


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, October 6



Lov U
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

"Lov U" is a multimedia installation by Senga Nengudi.

Colorado-based Senga Nengudi is a key figure of the Black Arts Movement in the 1970s and 1980s. Known primarily for performance-based art installations, her work focuses on movement and the human body, is multidisciplinary in nature and international in scope, with cultural references to Africa, the African Diaspora, and Asia. For her multimedia, performance-based exhibition "Lov U," Nengudi explores the physical senses of being human, and includes photographs and video to reflect on the essence of love. Drawn to discarded, everyday materials, the ephemerality of Nengudi's work is a metaphor for life's transience.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, October 6



The Other New York (TONY): 2012
XL Projects

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

XL Projects will present the work of seven artists selected for "The Other New York (TONY): 2012," a communitywide, multi-venue contemporary art exhibition featuring artists currently living in New York State outside of the New York City metropolitan area.

The artists showing work at XL Projects -- Michael Barletta, Daniel Buckingham, Jay Carrier, Meredith Davenport, Kara Daving, Tom DeLooza, and Fernando Orellana -- are among the 63 artists selected from 235 submissions for TONY: 2012. The work that will be on view at XL includes large sculpture, video, photography, kinetic sculpture, large-scale painting, and a large window graphic across the front of the venue.

TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with 14 art institutions and cultural organizations in Syracuse: ArtRage, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Onondaga Historical Association, Point of Contact, Rosamond Gifford Zoo, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, City of Syracuse, and XL Projects.

For more information, contact Andrew Havenhand at ahavenhand@yahoo.com. XL Projects may be contacted at 315-442-2542 during gallery hours. For more information about TONY: 2012 and the other exhibiting artists and venues, visit everson.org.


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6:45 PM - 11:00 PM, October 6



TONY 2012: Karen Brummund
Urban Video Project

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

The Everson is I.M. Pei's first museum commission. His art museums are commonly seen as art objects for art objects. They are sculptures in the landscape. Shortly after the Everson, Pei built the Johnson Museum of Art in Ithaca. In this site-specific video installation, images of the form and materials of both art museums are projected onto the Everson Museum. The images capture the light, surfaces, and depth of the architecture. The video uses images from two different buildings, analyzing how Pei's ideas bridge individual communities. These disparate places are abstractly connected through the architect's development. The plaza is not only infused with the presence of the Pei's forms, but also the conversation that takes place through his practice.

This video by Karen Brummund is part of The Other New York: 2012, a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaboration among 14 art organizations in Syracuse. This ambitious project aims
to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York.

Video projection begins at dusk.


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Comedy
 

8:00 PM, October 6



"Mystery Theme" Show
Salt City Improv Theater

Price: $5
Salt City Improv Theatre
Shoppingtown Mall, Sears Wing, Dewitt

We're not divulging what this month's theme is...you're going to have to come to the show and find out. Could it be about birthdays? Maybe. Politics or religion, you ask? Possibly. It might even be about baked goods (we do love cookies!) Perhaps--just perhaps--we might not even have a theme this month. The anticipation is electrifying, isn't it?

There's no mystery as to how hilariously funny the SCiT house team, Pork Pie Hat, is, as they perform their special brand of improv comedy (in the style of the hit TV show, "Whose Line Is It Anyway").


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Film
 

8:00 PM, October 6



Fellini Festival: La Strada (1954)
ArtRage Gallery

Price: $5 suggested donation
ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave., Syracuse

Discover the Fabulous Fellini, one of the most influential directors of our time!

La Strada (1954), with Giulietta Messina, Anthony Quinn, Richard Basehart

A young innocent is sold by her mother to a brutish strongman in a seedy circus. When he takes her on la strada (the road) she loses her heart to his old rival, and a doomed love triangle ignites. Filled with haunting symbolism, bravura performances, and a score you'll never forget. This moving reflection on love and hate won Fellini worldwide acclaim. He would go on to become one of the most influential directors of our time. Oscar: Best Foreign Language Film


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Lecture
 

2:00 PM - 3:00 PM, October 6



Lakeside Views Fall Ghostwalk
Onondaga Historical Association

Price: $10 members, $12 non-members (reservations required)
Village of Liverpool
Liverpool

Take an autumn stroll into the past to meet those spirited individuals who are a part of the history of Onondaga Lake and its picturesque lakeside village. Tours leave every 15 minutes.

For reservations, phone 315-428-1864, ext. 312.


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6:00 PM - 8:00 PM, October 6



Lakeside Views Fall Ghostwalk
Onondaga Historical Association

Price: $10 members, $12 non-members (reservations required)
Village of Liverpool
Liverpool

Take an autumn stroll into the past to meet those spirited individuals who are a part of the history of Onondaga Lake and its picturesque lakeside village. Tours leave every 15 minutes.

For reservations, phone 315-428-1864, ext. 312.


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Music
 

5:00 PM, October 6



Family Weekend Choral Concert
Syracuse University Setnor School of Music
S.U. Women's Choir, Concert Choir, University Singers, and Windjammer

Price: Free, but tickets are required
Setnor Auditorium, Crouse College
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Seating is limited. Free tickets available at Schine Box Office located in the Schine Student Union.

For most events, free and accessible parking is available on campus in the Q1 lot, conveniently located behind Crouse College. Additional parking is available in the Irving Garage. Campus parking availability is subject to change, so please call 315-443-2191 for current information.


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7:30 PM, October 6



Family Weekend Instrumental Concert
Syracuse University Setnor School of Music
S.U. Symphony Orchestra, Wind Ensemble, Symphonic Band, and Morton Shiff Jazz Ensemble

Price: Free, but tickets are required
Setnor Auditorium, Crouse College
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Seating is limited. Free tickets available at Schine Box Office located in the Schine Student Union.

For most events, free and accessible parking is available on campus in the Q1 lot, conveniently located behind Crouse College. Additional parking is available in the Irving Garage. Campus parking availability is subject to change, so please call 315-443-2191 for current information.


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Theater
 

11:00 AM, October 6



Aesop's Fables
Open Hand Theater
Steve Abrams

Price: $10 adults, $8 children
International Mask and Puppet Museum
518 Prospect Ave., Syracuse

A very funny performance of Aesop's Fables by master puppeteer Steve Abrams opens our World of Puppets season. Steve Abram's Aesop's Fables is a delight for all ages and has been performed in over 700 libraries. Known for his great rapport with children and his gentle performance style, Steve is a professional puppeteer who for over 25 years has given more than 4,000 performances and served twice as the President of The Puppeteers of America.


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11:00 AM, October 6



Dormouse Series: Pinkalicious, The Musical
Rarely Done Productions
David Cotter, director

Price: $15 ages 13 and over, $12 ages 6-12, $10 ages 5 and under
Jazz Central
441 E. Washington St., Syracuse

Pinkalicious can't stop eating pink cupcakes despite warnings from her parents. Her pink indulgence lands her at the doctor's office with Pinkititis, an affliction that turns her pink, from head to toe -- a dream come true for this pink loving enthusiast. But when her hue goes too far, only Pinkalicious can figure out a way to get out of this predicament. Based on the popular children's book Pinkalicious by Elizabeth Kann and Victoria Kann.

Book and lyrics by Elizabeth Kann and Victoria Kann; music, lyrics and orchestrations by John Gregor. Choreographed by Jodi Bova-Mele.

Read a review!


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2:00 PM, October 6



Dormouse Series: Pinkalicious, The Musical
Rarely Done Productions
David Cotter, director

Price: $15 ages 13 and over, $12 ages 6-12, $10 ages 5 and under
Jazz Central
441 E. Washington St., Syracuse

Pinkalicious can't stop eating pink cupcakes despite warnings from her parents. Her pink indulgence lands her at the doctor's office with Pinkititis, an affliction that turns her pink, from head to toe -- a dream come true for this pink loving enthusiast. But when her hue goes too far, only Pinkalicious can figure out a way to get out of this predicament. Based on the popular children's book Pinkalicious by Elizabeth Kann and Victoria Kann.

Book and lyrics by Elizabeth Kann and Victoria Kann; music, lyrics and orchestrations by John Gregor. Choreographed by Jodi Bova-Mele.

Read a review!


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2:00 PM, October 6



Merrily We Roll Along
Syracuse University Drama Department
Brian Cimmet, director

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

Stephen Sondheim and George Furth's legendary musical, Merrily We Roll Along, charts the rise of a songwriting team during the years of Sondheim's own young career. Starting in 1976 and running backward in time to 1955, this lively musical focuses on three individuals whose friendship is tested by time, events, ambition and fate. A masterly work by a master composer, Merrily We Roll Along features some of Sondheim's most brilliant and bruising songs, including "Not a Day Goes By," "Old Friends," "Our Time," and "Opening Doors."

Music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim, book by George Furth based on the play Merrily We Roll Along by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart.

Read a Review!


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8:00 PM, October 6



Assassins
Redhouse

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

This Sondheim musical explores the history of presidential assassination in America, from John Wilkes Booth to John Hinckley Jr. Assassins explores how society interprets the American Dream, marginalizes outsiders, and rewrites and sanitizes its collective history. A perfect evening of theatre that examines the state of contemporary politics during this election season. Music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim; book by John Weidman.

There will be a talkback session following each performance.

Read a Review!


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8:00 PM, October 6



Merrily We Roll Along
Syracuse University Drama Department
Brian Cimmet, director

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

Stephen Sondheim and George Furth's legendary musical, Merrily We Roll Along, charts the rise of a songwriting team during the years of Sondheim's own young career. Starting in 1976 and running backward in time to 1955, this lively musical focuses on three individuals whose friendship is tested by time, events, ambition and fate. A masterly work by a master composer, Merrily We Roll Along features some of Sondheim's most brilliant and bruising songs, including "Not a Day Goes By," "Old Friends," "Our Time," and "Opening Doors."

Music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim, book by George Furth based on the play Merrily We Roll Along by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart.

Read a Review!


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8:00 PM, October 6



Peaches and Crime, the Vagabond Cabaret
Twist Cabaret Theatre

Price: $10
Twist Ultra Lounge
252 W. Genesee St., Syracuse

A 1920s-themed Halloween party with costume contest.

Join us for a night of old-timey entertainment where you can be part of the fun. Come dressed as your favorite flapper or most-wanted mobster for our costume contest to be eligible to win prizes. Be transported back in time by all original songs and skits as well as authentic costumes from the period.


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10:30 PM, October 6



A...My Name is Alice
Syracuse University Drama Department

Price: Free
Sutton Pavillion, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse


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Sunday, October 7, 2012


Art
 

12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, October 7



Windows Project: TONY 2012
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

For this project, Jeffrey Einhorn created a site-specific installation "A Portrait of the Artist as a Giant Deflating Head" to address the fine line between performance art and sculpture while emphasizing wittily the unstable state of things or a disorder of a system.

This Window Projects exhibition is part of The Other New York: 2012, a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with 14 Syracuse partner art organizations to highlight artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties.


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10:00 AM - 3:00 PM, October 7



TONY: 2012: Variography
Erie Canal Museum

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

This exhibit features Buffalo artist Michael Bosworth's "Variography" -- a pair of installations, one inside the historic Syracuse Weighlock Building and the other outside and directly across the former Erie Canal (now Erie Blvd.) from the Weighlock. Inside there will be four-foot tall brick columns containing magic-lantern projectors, while outside will stand a camera obscurae built of cement on heavy wooden tripods.

Michael Bosworth is a nationally exhibiting artist and a professor in the photography department of Villa Maria College. He received his M.F.A. from the University of New Mexico, a B.F.A. and B.A. at UB. His commissioned public art projects include Fluid Culture, Main Street/Art Street, and Herd About Buffalo.

The Erie Canal Museum is proud to be a part of The Other New York: 2012 (TONY: 2012), an unprecedented community-wide, multi-venue contemporary art exhibition. TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with ArtRage, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Onondaga Historical Association, Point of Contact, Rosamond Gifford Zoo, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, City of Syracuse and XL Projects.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 7



Susan Worsham: Bittersweet/Bloodwork
Light Work Gallery

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

When Susan Worsham was just 18, her brother took his own life after severing his spinal cord in a motorcycle accident. As a young girl she had already lost her father to a heart attack, and finally in 2004, she lost her mother as well. In the words of Worsham, "Shortly after my mother passed I came across a set of antique veterinary slides. They were some of the most interesting things that I had ever seen. I framed ninety of them in a long wooden frame resembling the shape of the slide itself. It was the first piece of art that I made after my mother died. I called the piece a watercolor because of the collection of pastel colors, but it was also a sort of poem when you got close and read the titles ... Rabbit's Lung, Fowl's Spleen, and even Human Umbilical Cord. They seemed to hold beauty and death at the same time."

Worsham went on to photograph her old childhood home as well as her oldest neighbor, Margaret Daniel. Margaret is one of the last remaining threads from Worsham's childhood and was the last person to see her brother alive. She made him her homemade bread, and he finished the whole loaf before he shot himself. The story came full circle one day when Margaret brought out her dissection kit and microscope slides. She had been a biology teacher and was holding on to the same sort of slides that fascinated Worsham. Margaret's microscope and slides have since become a metaphor for Worsham's desire to look deeper into the landscape of her childhood--from the flora and fauna to the feelings, Margaret calls it "blood work."

In addition to Worsham's touching photographs made in and around Virginia, this exhibition features a selection of Margaret's dissection tools alongside her microscope, as well as audio recordings of their various conversations about plants, life, and death. All together, the photographs and accompaniments in Bittersweet/Bloodwork speak of the poetry of childhood, nature, discovery, love, and loss.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 7



TONY: 2012
Light Work Gallery

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

Light Work is pleased to announce the exhibition "The Other New York: 2012," featuring the photographic work of Sarah Averill, Bang-Geul Han, Mark McLoughlin, Jan Nagle, and Matthew Walker. This exhibition is part of a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaborion among 14 art organizations in Syracuse. This ambitious project aims to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 7



An American Vision: East Meets West
Szozda Gallery

Price: Free
Szozda Gallery
Delavan Center, 501 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

The fall season opens with new works by two popular local artists, Phil Parsons and Bob Niedzwiecki, who reveal the striking beauty between vastly different American landscapes of lush vegetation versus dry earth.

For Parsons, this show represents the latest installment of his familiar "Roadside Series," in which rural Central New York is prominent. This series of new images is done with a commitment to the realist movement, somewhat a departure for Parsons who says he is "not exclusively a traditional painter."

New works by realist painter Niedzwiecki deviate from the gentle, subtle Central New York landscapes for which he is typically known. A vacation return to the Southwest became the inspiration for capturing the beauty of landscapes that he fell in love with long before while living in Colorado and Arizona.


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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 7



Drama From the Garden: New Work by Terry Askey-Cole
Gallery 54

Gallery 54
54 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

Terry Askey-Cole brings her love of nature and the outdoors to all her new pieces inspired by her beautiful gardens.


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 7



Harvest
Gandee Gallery

Gandee Gallery
7846 Main St., Fabius

A group exhibition of Central New York artists which explores the inherit beauty of food and farming. It is during this time of year that the fruits of a farmer's labor are most appreciated, and preparation for winter, a time of hibernation and dormancy in the natural world, commences. The artists in Harvest celebrate this annual transition. The show will include photography, painting, pastel, and ceramics. Participating artists include Lisa Barker, Bob Gates, Wendy Harris, Jeremy Randall, Lucie Wellner, and Jamie Young.


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11:00 AM - 5:30 PM, October 7



Carl Hoffner Exhibition
Imagine

Imagine
38 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

An exhibition of limited-edition color lithographs and digital paintings by Fayetteville artist Carl Hoffner.


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 7



TONY: 2012: "Manifest Destiny and the American West" and "Last House"
Onondaga Historical Association

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

These exhibits are mounted as part of the The Other New York (TONY): 2012, Syracuse's art biennial. OHA's TONY: 2012 exhibits are artistically presented interpretations of dynamic social trends that are part of the historic legacy of Central New York.

In a three-dimensional display employing nearly 1,000 images set in glass jars, "Manifest Destiny and the American West," an exhibit by Buffalo artist Robert Hirsch, asks the visitor to think about how our nation's geographic progression across the continent has shaped American culture. The desire to exploit the salt brine reserves on Onondaga Lake contributed to a westward migration of settlers across Central New York in the post-American Revolution era, while the construction of the Erie Canal enhanced this movement through the 19th century and enabled many travelers to reach lands in the farther reaches of the American continent.

"Last House" is a multi-channel video installation by media artist Carl Lee that explores the aesthetics and means of a house demolition in Buffalo. Cities like Buffalo and Syracuse are faced with a large number of abandoned houses. This video asks us to think about what we gain and lose in demolishing them. This installation will be accompanied by three paintings by Western New York artist Amy Greenan of vacant houses in Syracuse awaiting an uncertain future, including "Not Here, Not Now," her interpretation of 711 Tully Street, which seems poised to have a different fate on Syracuse's Near West Side than that if the house in Last House.

Onondaga Historical Association is proud to be one of 14 Central New York venues for TONY: 2012. TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with ArtRage, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Onondaga Historical Association, Point of Contact, Rosamond Gifford Zoo, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, City of Syracuse, and XL Projects.


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 7



Sight Unseen: Stereographs from the OHA Collection, 1850-1930
Onondaga Historical Association

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

Since OHA's inception, it has amassed a collection of over 2,000 stereographs, or stereo views, of Onondaga County and beyond. Archived in the research holdings, these 3-D photographs have never before been exhibited. Guest curator Colleen Woolpert offers an overview of the collection, providing insight into the little known history of stereo photography while taking us back into the past with the aid of exhibition stereoscopes. The exhibit includes Syracuse views taken by local photographers as well as nationally-marketed views, historic stereoscopes, books, and related 3-D ephemera. It also looks at the combined industries of photography, publishing, manufacturing and marketing that contributed to the enormous popularity of the stereograph.


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 7



Take No Prisoners: Political Cartoons Over Time and Place
Onondaga Historical Association

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

Three well-known Central New York political cartoonists, Joe Glisson, Tim Atseff, and Frank Cammuso, are the featured cartoonists for an exhibition entitled "Take No Prisoners: Political Cartoons Over Time and Place." With insightful humor, these artists and their historic predecessors produced a wide variety of editorial cartoons that illustrated important issues of their time. Starting with cartoons from the Civil War era through the present day, "Take No Prisoners" is an opportunity to experience historic subjects as the current events they once were, and to see how election issues of the past compare with those of the present-day.


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 7



Syracuse Cultural Workers 100 @ 30
Onondaga Historical Association

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

100 posters celebrating 30 years. Since 1982, SCW has published and distributed over 700 posters across North America and a bit on other continents. This selection of 100 titles represents the best, the boldest, and the oldest.


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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, October 7



Karl Schrag: Memories and Premonitions
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

The Syracuse University Art Galleries is celebrating the career and life of Karl Schrag, American painter and printmaker, who would have been 100 years old this year. "Karl Schrag: Memories and Premonitions" is the first major examination of the artist's work since his death in 1995. The exhibition includes 70 original works of art by the influential artist, including paintings, prints and drawings.

Syracuse University has had a long and rewarding association with Karl Schrag and his family. It began in 1962 with a gift of a gouache painting titled "Coast in Autumn." Later the relationship grew with the first of numerous exhibitions, more gifts of artwork, and occasional lectures to students in the University's School of Art. Some 50 years later, S.U.'s art collection is much richer because of the 250-plus Karl Schrag artworks we maintain, and the continued support of Schrag Family.

2012 is also the centenary year of Karl Schrag's birth and gives us an opportunity to reinvestigate the talent, imagination, and sensitivity Schrag brought to his landscapes, still-life paintings, and portraits. A master of color, light, composition, and draftsmanship, Schrag captures nature and its great forces through an investigation of the lasting impressions each of us retain through experience. He engages his viewer with subtle mark making as well as with the bold calligraphic strokes so often associated with his work. His palette of almost Fauvist intensity adds dimension and passion to the landscapes he created.

Schrag's art career spanned more than 60 years and he had strong ties to the New York City art scene. After studying at the Art Students League, he joined S.W. Hayter's prestigious printmaking studio Atelier 17, working alongside artists Miró, Chagall and Jackson Pollock. Schrag was named director of the Atelier in 1950 and later began a long teaching career at Cooper Union, where he taught drawing and graphic arts from 1954-1968. Schrag had a direct impact on many of his students, including the Syracuse University-based artist Jerome Witkin. A student of Schrag at Cooper Union and a well-established contemporary artist, Witkin has commented on Schrags masterful handling of the landscape, and the evocative power of his vision.

The art selected for this exhibit will convey the artist's ability to see the landscape as if for the first time, the surprise of that special view, the recognition of his ability to feel wonder when looking at nature or figures, and the reward associated with seeing the world through his eyes.


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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, October 7



TONY: 2012
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

The Other New York: 2012 (Tony: 2012) is an ambitious project that aims to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties. The project offers diverse arts venues and outdoor public spaces for contemporary creative expression on a scale not before seen in Syracuse. In addition, TONY: 2012 demonstrates the power of artistic partnerships to boost public awareness of the arts by presenting opportunities for the community to connect with exhibitions, programs, and events offered simultaneously throughout the city.

The artists included in the SUArt Galleries TONY: 2012 are Tammy Brackett, Juan Cruz, Sara Di Donato, Matthew Glaysher, Amy Greenan, Sue Huggins Leopard, Barbara Page, James Skvarch.

The SUArt Galleries is one of 14 venues participating in this citywide celebration of the visual arts. Please take the time to visit the exhibitions at the other TONY venues to see the wealth of talent that resides and works upstate.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, October 7



The Other New York: 2012
Everson Museum of Art

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

The Other New York: 2012 is a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaboration among 12 art organizations in Syracuse. This ambitious project aims to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties. The project will offer diverse arts venues and outdoor public spaces for contemporary creative expression on a scale not before seen in Syracuse. In addition, TONY: 2012 demonstrates the power of artistic partnerships to boost public awareness of the arts by presenting opportunities for the community to connect with exhibitions, programs, and events offered simultaneously throughout the city.

TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with ArtRage-The Norton Putter Gallery, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Onondaga Historical Association, Punto de Contacto/Point of Contact, Red House Arts Center, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, City of Syracuse and XL Projects.

Alternative art spaces in the form of freight containers will provide temporary exhibition/installation sites. The containers will be strategically located in the city to link arts venues and encourage visitors to walk and experience art along the way.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, October 7



Prophecy: Peter B. Jones
Everson Museum of Art

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

"Prophecy" is a timely exhibition pertaining to Indigenous prophecies. By incorporating themes of ecology, creation, demise and the future according to the Mayan calendar, traditional Iroquois teachings and other cultural beliefs, Jones provides a visual representation of the foretold truths.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, October 7



The Other New York (TONY): 2012
XL Projects

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

XL Projects will present the work of seven artists selected for "The Other New York (TONY): 2012," a communitywide, multi-venue contemporary art exhibition featuring artists currently living in New York State outside of the New York City metropolitan area.

The artists showing work at XL Projects -- Michael Barletta, Daniel Buckingham, Jay Carrier, Meredith Davenport, Kara Daving, Tom DeLooza, and Fernando Orellana -- are among the 63 artists selected from 235 submissions for TONY: 2012. The work that will be on view at XL includes large sculpture, video, photography, kinetic sculpture, large-scale painting, and a large window graphic across the front of the venue.

TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with 14 art institutions and cultural organizations in Syracuse: ArtRage, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Onondaga Historical Association, Point of Contact, Rosamond Gifford Zoo, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, City of Syracuse, and XL Projects.

For more information, contact Andrew Havenhand at ahavenhand@yahoo.com. XL Projects may be contacted at 315-442-2542 during gallery hours. For more information about TONY: 2012 and the other exhibiting artists and venues, visit everson.org.


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Lecture
 

2:00 PM, October 7



Karl Schrag and the Legacy of Atelier 17
Syracuse University Art Museum
Featuring Domenic Iacono

Price: Free
Shemin Auditorium, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

The SUArt Galleries presents "Karl Schrag and the Legacy of Atelier 17," a lecture by Domenic Iacono, Director of the SUArt Galleries and Curator of "Karl Schrag: Memories and Premontions." Iacono will speak about Karl Schrag, S.W. Hayter and other important printmakers who worked at the Atelier 17, an experimental workshop for the graphic arts, during its existence in New York City.

The printmaker S.W.Hayter moved his world renowned Atelier 17 to New York City in the early 1940s to escape Nazi persecution of avant garde artists who were working in Paris. Many other artists followed him to NYC where the Atelier became a gathering spot for European surrealist artists and progressive American artists. Karl Schrag began working there in the mid-40s and eventually became director of the Atelier after Hayter returned to Paris in 1950. Schrag became a well known printmaker and had retrospective exhibitions at the Brooklyn Museum, the National Collection of Fine Arts, and the Farnsworth Museum.


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3:00 PM, October 7



Judicial Politics in Polarized Times
University Neighbors Lecture Series
Featuring Thomas Keck

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

Thomas M. Keck is the Michael O. Sawyer Chair of Constitutional Law and Politics and Chair of the Department of Political Science at Syracuse University's Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs. He received a B.A. in Politics from Oberlin College and an M.A. and Ph.D. in Political Science from Rutgers University. He is the author of a 2004 book entitled The Most Activist Supreme Court in History: The Road to Modern Judicial Conservatism, and is currently writing a book about the role played by courts in settling polarized political disputes over abortion, affirmative action, gay rights, and gun rights during the Clinton, Bush, and Obama eras.


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Music
 

2:00 PM, October 7



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

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

For most events, free and accessible parking is available on campus in the Q1 lot, located behind Crouse College. Additional parking is available in the Irving Garage.


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4:00 PM, October 7



Petrarca - The Musicians' Poet
Schola Cantorum of Syracuse
Barry Torres, conductor

Price: $15 regular, $10 students/seniors
Hendricks Chapel
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Medieval and Renaissance choral settings of texts of the celebrated Italian poet Petrarca (d. 1374, known in English as Petrarach), by Jacobo da Bologna, DuFay, Willaert, Lasso, Marenzio, and Monteverdi


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5:00 PM, October 7



Rani Arbo, with Maria Gillard and host Jeffrey Pepper Rodgers
Words and Music Songwriter Showcase

Price: $10
Creekside Books
35 Fennell St., Skaneateles

Rani Arbo, leader of the dynamic roots band Rani Arbo and Daisy Mayhem, comes to Central and Western New York on Columbus Day weekend for her first-ever solo appearances spotlighting her original songs. The New England-based singer/fiddler has been performing nationally for more than 20 years with daisy mayhem and her earlier bluegrass group Salamander Crossing, appearing regularly at Newport and other major festivals, and has toured with Joan Baez. Arbo delivers her own songs, steeped in folk, gospel, and old-time music, with a gorgeous alto that the Boston Globe describes as having simultaneous shades of sass and grace, world-weariness and resilience.

The October concerts will feature Arbo alongside Maria Gillard, a Kerrville New Folk finalist based in Rochester, and John Lennon Songwriting Contest winner Jeffrey Pepper Rodgers, who organized the events as part of his Syracuse-based Words and Music Songwriter Showcase.


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8:00 PM, October 7



Ott and the All Seeing I, with Govinda
Westcott Theater

Westcott Theater
524 Westcott St., Syracuse


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Theater
 

2:00 PM, October 7



Dormouse Series: Pinkalicious, The Musical
Rarely Done Productions
David Cotter, director

Price: $15 ages 13 and over, $12 ages 6-12, $10 ages 5 and under
Jazz Central
441 E. Washington St., Syracuse

Pinkalicious can't stop eating pink cupcakes despite warnings from her parents. Her pink indulgence lands her at the doctor's office with Pinkititis, an affliction that turns her pink, from head to toe -- a dream come true for this pink loving enthusiast. But when her hue goes too far, only Pinkalicious can figure out a way to get out of this predicament. Based on the popular children's book Pinkalicious by Elizabeth Kann and Victoria Kann.

Book and lyrics by Elizabeth Kann and Victoria Kann; music, lyrics and orchestrations by John Gregor. Choreographed by Jodi Bova-Mele.

Read a review!


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2:00 PM, October 7



Merrily We Roll Along
Syracuse University Drama Department
Brian Cimmet, director

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

Stephen Sondheim and George Furth's legendary musical, Merrily We Roll Along, charts the rise of a songwriting team during the years of Sondheim's own young career. Starting in 1976 and running backward in time to 1955, this lively musical focuses on three individuals whose friendship is tested by time, events, ambition and fate. A masterly work by a master composer, Merrily We Roll Along features some of Sondheim's most brilliant and bruising songs, including "Not a Day Goes By," "Old Friends," "Our Time," and "Opening Doors."

Music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim, book by George Furth based on the play Merrily We Roll Along by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart.

Read a Review!


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4:00 PM, October 7



Dormouse Series: Pinkalicious, The Musical
Rarely Done Productions
David Cotter, director

Price: $15 ages 13 and over, $12 ages 6-12, $10 ages 5 and under
Jazz Central
441 E. Washington St., Syracuse

Pinkalicious can't stop eating pink cupcakes despite warnings from her parents. Her pink indulgence lands her at the doctor's office with Pinkititis, an affliction that turns her pink, from head to toe -- a dream come true for this pink loving enthusiast. But when her hue goes too far, only Pinkalicious can figure out a way to get out of this predicament. Based on the popular children's book Pinkalicious by Elizabeth Kann and Victoria Kann.

Book and lyrics by Elizabeth Kann and Victoria Kann; music, lyrics and orchestrations by John Gregor. Choreographed by Jodi Bova-Mele.

Read a review!


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6:00 PM, October 7



A...My Name is Alice
Syracuse University Drama Department

Price: Free
Sutton Pavillion, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse


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Monday, October 8, 2012


Art
 

12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, October 8



Windows Project: TONY 2012
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

For this project, Jeffrey Einhorn created a site-specific installation "A Portrait of the Artist as a Giant Deflating Head" to address the fine line between performance art and sculpture while emphasizing wittily the unstable state of things or a disorder of a system.

This Window Projects exhibition is part of The Other New York: 2012, a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with 14 Syracuse partner art organizations to highlight artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 8



Lynette Blake: Within and Beyond
Weeks Art Gallery at Baltimore Woods

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

Lynette Blake's oil paintings draw the viewer in through complex layers of shape and color. The use of overlapping imagery conveys a depth that extends deep below the surface of the canvas. Objects, whether used directly or evoked by abstract shapes, float in and out of light illuminating them with a pervasive warm glow. The effect is otherworldly -- a feeling of being outside time and space is conveyed.

Blake has exhibited her work throughout the Northeast, and is currently represented locally by the Szozda Gallery in Syracuse, as well as national venues. She studied art at Brown University in Rhode Island and currently resides in Upstate NY.

More information on the Weeks Gallery at Baltimore Woods can be found at www.baltimorewoods.org.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 8



Gallery Exhibit: Brendan Rose & Michael Barletta: Paper, Staple, String
Onondaga Community College

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

"Paper, Staple, String" is a spatial installation, transforming Onondaga's Gallery into a dynamic field of suspended objects. Educational remnants (the discarded paperwork of students) are reclaimed as monochromatic pixels of a space defining cloud. This three-dimensional form transfigures as it intersects with the gallery walls, flattening and expanding against the two-dimensional surface.


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9:00 AM - 2:00 PM, October 8



TONY: 2012: Ink Geographies
Point of Contact Gallery

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

Feels like writing, but the artist is quick to make clear that it is not. Signs, representations ... of what? A mental process, a journey, from diverse points of origin through our individual timelines, our personal twists and turns. As a script emerges, something is set free, though it leaves a mark, an imprint. The artist's essential playground is a space to explore geometric archetypes that can only be found inside one another; all are one. A sacred mandala? Images contract and expand and there is order, not chaos. No more chaotic than life emerging from the womb, contraction, expansion; a beating heart, where life is felt, contraction, expansion...an ever-expanding universe, contracts only to further expand. We don't know how to will it into action. A similar experience with ink takes form in this experiment by Oscar Garcés. It flows from a playful doodle, "el virus," he calls it. And before you know it, connects with something else, an altered state of consciousness. Everything else disappears as it takes over.

The Point of Contact Gallery presents the first solo show by Cuban-born, Syracuse-based artist Oscar Garcés, as part of The Other New York: TONY 2012, a community-wide biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaboration among 14 venues in Syracuse. This program also commemorates the celebration of Hispanic Heritage Month at Point of Contact.

Born in Santiago, Cuba in 1987, Garcés came to the United States in 2000. During his years residing first in Florida, when he began to develop as a visual artist, Garcés received multiple recognitions, including a Golden Key Award for best portfolio by Scholastics. Later in Syracuse, Garcés won a "Best of Show" Award at the Community Folk Art Center in 2005. He has also shown his paintings at the Warehouse Gallery's Window Project and at La Casita Cultural Center Gallery.

TONY 2012: "The Other New York" seeks to highlight the work and talent of different rising artists from the Central New York area.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 8



Phonography
Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

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

Cell phone photography, featuring works of 75 Central New York and international artists. Amazing, imaginative, creative, innovative, fun photos you'll love!


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 8



Assembly-line Architecture: Repetition and Innovation in the Work of Marcel Breuer
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

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

The exhibit, curated by Teresa Harris, architectural historian and project coordinator for the Marcel Breuer Digital Archive, showcases original drawings, photographs and documents from Breuer's long career.

Like many modern architects, Marcel Breuer found inspiration in the repetition characteristic of industrial processes, often relying on modular units or a standard kit of parts to create his buildings and interiors. The limits imposed by these systems stimulated subtle formal and spatial innovation so that no two designs were exactly alike, despite common components.


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 8



Investigations
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
Slocum Hall Gallery
Syracuse University campus, Syracuse

An exhibition of the work and design process of Stephan Jaklitsch and Mark Gardner through sketches, models, renderings, construction drawings, and photographs of six projects. Their work addresses specific conditions of site, use, the psychology of experience, sustainability, techniques of construction craft in detail, and materiality of building.

Jaklitsch/Gardner Architects (J/GA) is an award-winning NYC-based design practice that focuses on urban scale projects, buildings, interiors, and objects. Award-winning projects include the Marc Jacobs Tokyo Flagship Building (2010); a bike rack for the NYC Dept. of Transportation that was exhibited at the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum (2008); and the Marc Jacobs International Showroom (2012).


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 8



TONY: 2012: Variography
Erie Canal Museum

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

This exhibit features Buffalo artist Michael Bosworth's "Variography" -- a pair of installations, one inside the historic Syracuse Weighlock Building and the other outside and directly across the former Erie Canal (now Erie Blvd.) from the Weighlock. Inside there will be four-foot tall brick columns containing magic-lantern projectors, while outside will stand a camera obscurae built of cement on heavy wooden tripods.

Michael Bosworth is a nationally exhibiting artist and a professor in the photography department of Villa Maria College. He received his M.F.A. from the University of New Mexico, a B.F.A. and B.A. at UB. His commissioned public art projects include Fluid Culture, Main Street/Art Street, and Herd About Buffalo.

The Erie Canal Museum is proud to be a part of The Other New York: 2012 (TONY: 2012), an unprecedented community-wide, multi-venue contemporary art exhibition. TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with ArtRage, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Onondaga Historical Association, Point of Contact, Rosamond Gifford Zoo, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, City of Syracuse and XL Projects.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 8



Drama From the Garden: New Work by Terry Askey-Cole
Gallery 54

Gallery 54
54 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

Terry Askey-Cole brings her love of nature and the outdoors to all her new pieces inspired by her beautiful gardens.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 8



Carl Hoffner Exhibition
Imagine

Imagine
38 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

An exhibition of limited-edition color lithographs and digital paintings by Fayetteville artist Carl Hoffner.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 8



Susan Worsham: Bittersweet/Bloodwork
Light Work Gallery

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

When Susan Worsham was just 18, her brother took his own life after severing his spinal cord in a motorcycle accident. As a young girl she had already lost her father to a heart attack, and finally in 2004, she lost her mother as well. In the words of Worsham, "Shortly after my mother passed I came across a set of antique veterinary slides. They were some of the most interesting things that I had ever seen. I framed ninety of them in a long wooden frame resembling the shape of the slide itself. It was the first piece of art that I made after my mother died. I called the piece a watercolor because of the collection of pastel colors, but it was also a sort of poem when you got close and read the titles ... Rabbit's Lung, Fowl's Spleen, and even Human Umbilical Cord. They seemed to hold beauty and death at the same time."

Worsham went on to photograph her old childhood home as well as her oldest neighbor, Margaret Daniel. Margaret is one of the last remaining threads from Worsham's childhood and was the last person to see her brother alive. She made him her homemade bread, and he finished the whole loaf before he shot himself. The story came full circle one day when Margaret brought out her dissection kit and microscope slides. She had been a biology teacher and was holding on to the same sort of slides that fascinated Worsham. Margaret's microscope and slides have since become a metaphor for Worsham's desire to look deeper into the landscape of her childhood--from the flora and fauna to the feelings, Margaret calls it "blood work."

In addition to Worsham's touching photographs made in and around Virginia, this exhibition features a selection of Margaret's dissection tools alongside her microscope, as well as audio recordings of their various conversations about plants, life, and death. All together, the photographs and accompaniments in Bittersweet/Bloodwork speak of the poetry of childhood, nature, discovery, love, and loss.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 8



TONY: 2012
Light Work Gallery

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

Light Work is pleased to announce the exhibition "The Other New York: 2012," featuring the photographic work of Sarah Averill, Bang-Geul Han, Mark McLoughlin, Jan Nagle, and Matthew Walker. This exhibition is part of a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaborion among 14 art organizations in Syracuse. This ambitious project aims to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 10:00 PM, October 8



Faces, Forms and Illusions: Works by Scott Hutchison
Redhouse

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

Scott Hutchison is a painter living in the Washington DC metro area. His work combines contemporary realism and animation. An exploration of the human figure continues to be the leitmotiv of Hutchison's work with a long-standing interest in self portraiture.

Hutchison says:
"My animations combine traditional painting and drawing techniques with digital technology to create animated portraits, which are displayed on small LCD panels, or projected, large-scale. Dozens of individual stills portray my face, changing only slightly from one image to the next. When the images are unified digitally, an animation is created. Each video is comprised of multiple painted or drawn self-portraits that, although similar, possess slight variations of color and treatment. When animated, the paint and mark move across the surface, resulting in a portrait that is in constant flux."


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 8



Framed Un Framed
601 Tully

601 Tully St.
Syracuse

An exhibition of artists with a dual practice, featuring Abby Carter, Samantha Harmon, Lori Hawke, Stephanie Koenig, Lynette K Stephenson, and Marion Wilson.



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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, October 8



Puerto Rican Bomba and Plena: A Graphic History
La Casita Cultural Center

Price: Free
La Casita Cultural Center
109 Otisco St., Syracuse

The exhibit presents the works of nine Puerto Rican master artists who were commissioned to create screen prints to capture the spirit of the annual Bomba and Plena Festivals held in Puerto Rico. Their posters have been collected and preserved by the Institute of Puerto Rican Culture in San Juan.

Featured artists are José R. Alicea, Luis Alonso, Luis Germán Cajigas, Jesús Cardona, Sixto Cotto, David Goitia, Samuel Lind, Luis Maisonet Ramos, and Nelson Sambolin.


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1:00 PM - 5:00 PM, October 8



Raw Revelations: The Reunion of Hand Tools and Production
The Warehouse Gallery

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

In recent years, the connection between process and product has slowly separated, creating a rift between the two. Consumers often do not know who is designing and constructing the products they buy. However, a rising movement is reuniting the experience of creating something by hand and the finished product. Craftspeople worldwide are continuing the tradition of working with their hands and their cherished hand tools, forging a connection with what they make.

This new exhibition illuminates the idea of this connection between history, design and craftsmanship through a sensory experience for the viewers. The show invites the public to learn about the history of hand tools and woodworking, witness part of the process of creating a wooden stool by hand and find out how to reconnect the process of creating something with the final product.

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


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Music
 

7:30 PM, October 8



United States Marine Band

Price: Free, but tickets required
Crouse Hinds Concert Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St., Syracuse

To request tickets (maximum of four per request), send a stamped, self-addressed envelope to:
Special Events Office
Department of Parks & Recreation
412 Spencer St.
Syracuse, NY 13204

Seating is general admission. Ticket holders must be seated by 7:15. If seats remain, non-ticketholders will be admitted.


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8:00 PM, October 8



Borgore
Westcott Theater

Westcott Theater
524 Westcott St., Syracuse


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Tuesday, October 9, 2012


Art
 

12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, October 9



Windows Project: TONY 2012
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

For this project, Jeffrey Einhorn created a site-specific installation "A Portrait of the Artist as a Giant Deflating Head" to address the fine line between performance art and sculpture while emphasizing wittily the unstable state of things or a disorder of a system.

This Window Projects exhibition is part of The Other New York: 2012, a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with 14 Syracuse partner art organizations to highlight artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 9



Lynette Blake: Within and Beyond
Weeks Art Gallery at Baltimore Woods

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

Lynette Blake's oil paintings draw the viewer in through complex layers of shape and color. The use of overlapping imagery conveys a depth that extends deep below the surface of the canvas. Objects, whether used directly or evoked by abstract shapes, float in and out of light illuminating them with a pervasive warm glow. The effect is otherworldly -- a feeling of being outside time and space is conveyed.

Blake has exhibited her work throughout the Northeast, and is currently represented locally by the Szozda Gallery in Syracuse, as well as national venues. She studied art at Brown University in Rhode Island and currently resides in Upstate NY.

More information on the Weeks Gallery at Baltimore Woods can be found at www.baltimorewoods.org.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 9



Gallery Exhibit: Brendan Rose & Michael Barletta: Paper, Staple, String
Onondaga Community College

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

"Paper, Staple, String" is a spatial installation, transforming Onondaga's Gallery into a dynamic field of suspended objects. Educational remnants (the discarded paperwork of students) are reclaimed as monochromatic pixels of a space defining cloud. This three-dimensional form transfigures as it intersects with the gallery walls, flattening and expanding against the two-dimensional surface.


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9:00 AM - 2:00 PM, October 9



TONY: 2012: Ink Geographies
Point of Contact Gallery

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

Feels like writing, but the artist is quick to make clear that it is not. Signs, representations ... of what? A mental process, a journey, from diverse points of origin through our individual timelines, our personal twists and turns. As a script emerges, something is set free, though it leaves a mark, an imprint. The artist's essential playground is a space to explore geometric archetypes that can only be found inside one another; all are one. A sacred mandala? Images contract and expand and there is order, not chaos. No more chaotic than life emerging from the womb, contraction, expansion; a beating heart, where life is felt, contraction, expansion...an ever-expanding universe, contracts only to further expand. We don't know how to will it into action. A similar experience with ink takes form in this experiment by Oscar Garcés. It flows from a playful doodle, "el virus," he calls it. And before you know it, connects with something else, an altered state of consciousness. Everything else disappears as it takes over.

The Point of Contact Gallery presents the first solo show by Cuban-born, Syracuse-based artist Oscar Garcés, as part of The Other New York: TONY 2012, a community-wide biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaboration among 14 venues in Syracuse. This program also commemorates the celebration of Hispanic Heritage Month at Point of Contact.

Born in Santiago, Cuba in 1987, Garcés came to the United States in 2000. During his years residing first in Florida, when he began to develop as a visual artist, Garcés received multiple recognitions, including a Golden Key Award for best portfolio by Scholastics. Later in Syracuse, Garcés won a "Best of Show" Award at the Community Folk Art Center in 2005. He has also shown his paintings at the Warehouse Gallery's Window Project and at La Casita Cultural Center Gallery.

TONY 2012: "The Other New York" seeks to highlight the work and talent of different rising artists from the Central New York area.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 9



Phonography
Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

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

Cell phone photography, featuring works of 75 Central New York and international artists. Amazing, imaginative, creative, innovative, fun photos you'll love!


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9:00 AM - 7:00 PM, October 9



Assembly-line Architecture: Repetition and Innovation in the Work of Marcel Breuer
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

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

The exhibit, curated by Teresa Harris, architectural historian and project coordinator for the Marcel Breuer Digital Archive, showcases original drawings, photographs and documents from Breuer's long career.

Like many modern architects, Marcel Breuer found inspiration in the repetition characteristic of industrial processes, often relying on modular units or a standard kit of parts to create his buildings and interiors. The limits imposed by these systems stimulated subtle formal and spatial innovation so that no two designs were exactly alike, despite common components.


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 9



Investigations
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
Slocum Hall Gallery
Syracuse University campus, Syracuse

An exhibition of the work and design process of Stephan Jaklitsch and Mark Gardner through sketches, models, renderings, construction drawings, and photographs of six projects. Their work addresses specific conditions of site, use, the psychology of experience, sustainability, techniques of construction craft in detail, and materiality of building.

Jaklitsch/Gardner Architects (J/GA) is an award-winning NYC-based design practice that focuses on urban scale projects, buildings, interiors, and objects. Award-winning projects include the Marc Jacobs Tokyo Flagship Building (2010); a bike rack for the NYC Dept. of Transportation that was exhibited at the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum (2008); and the Marc Jacobs International Showroom (2012).


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 9



The dB Cultural Revolution series by Decibel
Westcott Community Art Gallery

Price: Free
Westcott Community Center
Corner of Euclid Ave. and Westcott St., Syracuse

Propaganda images generated during the Cultural Revolution in China have been remixed to create commentary on the modern Cultural Revolution society is undergoing in the form of music, art, and media. Elements of the old and new are mixed together to evolve into something new.


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



Play on Light
Edgewood Gallery

Price: Free
Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd., Syracuse

Adriana Meiss: Pastel landscapes
John Franklin: Turned wood and sculptural vessels
Paul Riccardi: Pastel florals and still-lifes
Judy McCumber: Silver and gemstone jewelry


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 9



TONY: 2012 (The Other New York)
Community Folk Art Center

Price: Free
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

The Other New York: 2012 is a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaboration among 12 art organizations in Syracuse. This ambitious project aims to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties. The project will offer diverse arts venues and outdoor public spaces for contemporary creative expression on a scale not before seen in Syracuse. In addition, TONY: 2012 demonstrates the power of artistic partnerships to boost public awareness of the arts by presenting opportunities for the community to connect with exhibitions, programs, and events offered simultaneously throughout the city.

TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with ArtRage, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Punto de Contacto/Point of Contact, Red House Arts Center, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, and the City of Syracuse. Alternative art spaces in the form of freight containers will provide temporary exhibition/installation sites. The containers will be strategically located in the city to link arts venues and encourage visitors to walk and experience art along the way.

Community Folk Art Center TONY 2012 featured artists are Elizabeth Leader, Michael Moody, Abisay Puentes, Sandra Stephens, who each use their art to engage in a larger conversation about significant but often overlooked social issues, including racial identity and urban decay.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 9



TONY: 2012: Variography
Erie Canal Museum

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

This exhibit features Buffalo artist Michael Bosworth's "Variography" -- a pair of installations, one inside the historic Syracuse Weighlock Building and the other outside and directly across the former Erie Canal (now Erie Blvd.) from the Weighlock. Inside there will be four-foot tall brick columns containing magic-lantern projectors, while outside will stand a camera obscurae built of cement on heavy wooden tripods.

Michael Bosworth is a nationally exhibiting artist and a professor in the photography department of Villa Maria College. He received his M.F.A. from the University of New Mexico, a B.F.A. and B.A. at UB. His commissioned public art projects include Fluid Culture, Main Street/Art Street, and Herd About Buffalo.

The Erie Canal Museum is proud to be a part of The Other New York: 2012 (TONY: 2012), an unprecedented community-wide, multi-venue contemporary art exhibition. TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with ArtRage, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Onondaga Historical Association, Point of Contact, Rosamond Gifford Zoo, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, City of Syracuse and XL Projects.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 9



Drama From the Garden: New Work by Terry Askey-Cole
Gallery 54

Gallery 54
54 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

Terry Askey-Cole brings her love of nature and the outdoors to all her new pieces inspired by her beautiful gardens.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 9



Carl Hoffner Exhibition
Imagine

Imagine
38 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

An exhibition of limited-edition color lithographs and digital paintings by Fayetteville artist Carl Hoffner.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 9



Susan Worsham: Bittersweet/Bloodwork
Light Work Gallery

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

When Susan Worsham was just 18, her brother took his own life after severing his spinal cord in a motorcycle accident. As a young girl she had already lost her father to a heart attack, and finally in 2004, she lost her mother as well. In the words of Worsham, "Shortly after my mother passed I came across a set of antique veterinary slides. They were some of the most interesting things that I had ever seen. I framed ninety of them in a long wooden frame resembling the shape of the slide itself. It was the first piece of art that I made after my mother died. I called the piece a watercolor because of the collection of pastel colors, but it was also a sort of poem when you got close and read the titles ... Rabbit's Lung, Fowl's Spleen, and even Human Umbilical Cord. They seemed to hold beauty and death at the same time."

Worsham went on to photograph her old childhood home as well as her oldest neighbor, Margaret Daniel. Margaret is one of the last remaining threads from Worsham's childhood and was the last person to see her brother alive. She made him her homemade bread, and he finished the whole loaf before he shot himself. The story came full circle one day when Margaret brought out her dissection kit and microscope slides. She had been a biology teacher and was holding on to the same sort of slides that fascinated Worsham. Margaret's microscope and slides have since become a metaphor for Worsham's desire to look deeper into the landscape of her childhood--from the flora and fauna to the feelings, Margaret calls it "blood work."

In addition to Worsham's touching photographs made in and around Virginia, this exhibition features a selection of Margaret's dissection tools alongside her microscope, as well as audio recordings of their various conversations about plants, life, and death. All together, the photographs and accompaniments in Bittersweet/Bloodwork speak of the poetry of childhood, nature, discovery, love, and loss.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 9



TONY: 2012
Light Work Gallery

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

Light Work is pleased to announce the exhibition "The Other New York: 2012," featuring the photographic work of Sarah Averill, Bang-Geul Han, Mark McLoughlin, Jan Nagle, and Matthew Walker. This exhibition is part of a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaborion among 14 art organizations in Syracuse. This ambitious project aims to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 10:00 PM, October 9



Faces, Forms and Illusions: Works by Scott Hutchison
Redhouse

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

Scott Hutchison is a painter living in the Washington DC metro area. His work combines contemporary realism and animation. An exploration of the human figure continues to be the leitmotiv of Hutchison's work with a long-standing interest in self portraiture.

Hutchison says:
"My animations combine traditional painting and drawing techniques with digital technology to create animated portraits, which are displayed on small LCD panels, or projected, large-scale. Dozens of individual stills portray my face, changing only slightly from one image to the next. When the images are unified digitally, an animation is created. Each video is comprised of multiple painted or drawn self-portraits that, although similar, possess slight variations of color and treatment. When animated, the paint and mark move across the surface, resulting in a portrait that is in constant flux."


Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 9



Framed Un Framed
601 Tully

601 Tully St.
Syracuse

An exhibition of artists with a dual practice, featuring Abby Carter, Samantha Harmon, Lori Hawke, Stephanie Koenig, Lynette K Stephenson, and Marion Wilson.



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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, October 9



Karl Schrag: Memories and Premonitions
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

The Syracuse University Art Galleries is celebrating the career and life of Karl Schrag, American painter and printmaker, who would have been 100 years old this year. "Karl Schrag: Memories and Premonitions" is the first major examination of the artist's work since his death in 1995. The exhibition includes 70 original works of art by the influential artist, including paintings, prints and drawings.

Syracuse University has had a long and rewarding association with Karl Schrag and his family. It began in 1962 with a gift of a gouache painting titled "Coast in Autumn." Later the relationship grew with the first of numerous exhibitions, more gifts of artwork, and occasional lectures to students in the University's School of Art. Some 50 years later, S.U.'s art collection is much richer because of the 250-plus Karl Schrag artworks we maintain, and the continued support of Schrag Family.

2012 is also the centenary year of Karl Schrag's birth and gives us an opportunity to reinvestigate the talent, imagination, and sensitivity Schrag brought to his landscapes, still-life paintings, and portraits. A master of color, light, composition, and draftsmanship, Schrag captures nature and its great forces through an investigation of the lasting impressions each of us retain through experience. He engages his viewer with subtle mark making as well as with the bold calligraphic strokes so often associated with his work. His palette of almost Fauvist intensity adds dimension and passion to the landscapes he created.

Schrag's art career spanned more than 60 years and he had strong ties to the New York City art scene. After studying at the Art Students League, he joined S.W. Hayter's prestigious printmaking studio Atelier 17, working alongside artists Miró, Chagall and Jackson Pollock. Schrag was named director of the Atelier in 1950 and later began a long teaching career at Cooper Union, where he taught drawing and graphic arts from 1954-1968. Schrag had a direct impact on many of his students, including the Syracuse University-based artist Jerome Witkin. A student of Schrag at Cooper Union and a well-established contemporary artist, Witkin has commented on Schrags masterful handling of the landscape, and the evocative power of his vision.

The art selected for this exhibit will convey the artist's ability to see the landscape as if for the first time, the surprise of that special view, the recognition of his ability to feel wonder when looking at nature or figures, and the reward associated with seeing the world through his eyes.


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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, October 9



TONY: 2012
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

The Other New York: 2012 (Tony: 2012) is an ambitious project that aims to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties. The project offers diverse arts venues and outdoor public spaces for contemporary creative expression on a scale not before seen in Syracuse. In addition, TONY: 2012 demonstrates the power of artistic partnerships to boost public awareness of the arts by presenting opportunities for the community to connect with exhibitions, programs, and events offered simultaneously throughout the city.

The artists included in the SUArt Galleries TONY: 2012 are Tammy Brackett, Juan Cruz, Sara Di Donato, Matthew Glaysher, Amy Greenan, Sue Huggins Leopard, Barbara Page, James Skvarch.

The SUArt Galleries is one of 14 venues participating in this citywide celebration of the visual arts. Please take the time to visit the exhibitions at the other TONY venues to see the wealth of talent that resides and works upstate.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, October 9



Prophecy: Peter B. Jones
Everson Museum of Art

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

"Prophecy" is a timely exhibition pertaining to Indigenous prophecies. By incorporating themes of ecology, creation, demise and the future according to the Mayan calendar, traditional Iroquois teachings and other cultural beliefs, Jones provides a visual representation of the foretold truths.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, October 9



The Other New York: 2012
Everson Museum of Art

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

The Other New York: 2012 is a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaboration among 12 art organizations in Syracuse. This ambitious project aims to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties. The project will offer diverse arts venues and outdoor public spaces for contemporary creative expression on a scale not before seen in Syracuse. In addition, TONY: 2012 demonstrates the power of artistic partnerships to boost public awareness of the arts by presenting opportunities for the community to connect with exhibitions, programs, and events offered simultaneously throughout the city.

TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with ArtRage-The Norton Putter Gallery, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Onondaga Historical Association, Punto de Contacto/Point of Contact, Red House Arts Center, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, City of Syracuse and XL Projects.

Alternative art spaces in the form of freight containers will provide temporary exhibition/installation sites. The containers will be strategically located in the city to link arts venues and encourage visitors to walk and experience art along the way.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, October 9



Puerto Rican Bomba and Plena: A Graphic History
La Casita Cultural Center

Price: Free
La Casita Cultural Center
109 Otisco St., Syracuse

The exhibit presents the works of nine Puerto Rican master artists who were commissioned to create screen prints to capture the spirit of the annual Bomba and Plena Festivals held in Puerto Rico. Their posters have been collected and preserved by the Institute of Puerto Rican Culture in San Juan.

Featured artists are José R. Alicea, Luis Alonso, Luis Germán Cajigas, Jesús Cardona, Sixto Cotto, David Goitia, Samuel Lind, Luis Maisonet Ramos, and Nelson Sambolin.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, October 9



Lov U
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

"Lov U" is a multimedia installation by Senga Nengudi.

Colorado-based Senga Nengudi is a key figure of the Black Arts Movement in the 1970s and 1980s. Known primarily for performance-based art installations, her work focuses on movement and the human body, is multidisciplinary in nature and international in scope, with cultural references to Africa, the African Diaspora, and Asia. For her multimedia, performance-based exhibition "Lov U," Nengudi explores the physical senses of being human, and includes photographs and video to reflect on the essence of love. Drawn to discarded, everyday materials, the ephemerality of Nengudi's work is a metaphor for life's transience.


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1:00 PM - 6:00 PM, October 9



life. love. time travel.
Echo

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

Group show of works by over 20 artists.


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1:00 PM - 5:00 PM, October 9



Raw Revelations: The Reunion of Hand Tools and Production
The Warehouse Gallery

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

In recent years, the connection between process and product has slowly separated, creating a rift between the two. Consumers often do not know who is designing and constructing the products they buy. However, a rising movement is reuniting the experience of creating something by hand and the finished product. Craftspeople worldwide are continuing the tradition of working with their hands and their cherished hand tools, forging a connection with what they make.

This new exhibition illuminates the idea of this connection between history, design and craftsmanship through a sensory experience for the viewers. The show invites the public to learn about the history of hand tools and woodworking, witness part of the process of creating a wooden stool by hand and find out how to reconnect the process of creating something with the final product.

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


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Lecture
 

5:00 PM, October 9



Sweet & Salt: Water and the Dutch
Syracuse University School of Architecture
Featuring Tracy Metz

Price: Free
Slocum Hall Auditorium
Syracuse University campus, Syracuse

Book signing and reception to follow.


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Music
 

7:00 PM, October 9



One World Concert

Price: $35-$55, $200
JMA Wireless Dome
Syracuse University campus, Syracuse

Tickets to the One World Concert include admission to the combined public talk by the Dalai Lama and the musical performances.

The One World Concert is expected to be one of the largest gatherings of international artists ever to travel to the region. A special benefit concert immediately follows a public talk by the Dalai Lama and features an original song written and performed by multiple artists, especially for His Holiness.

The all-star lineup for the One World Concert features scheduled appearances by: Host band Don Was and his All-Star Band, Dave Matthews, Counting Crows, Phillip Phillips, Nas, A.R. Rahman, Andy Grammer, Matisyahu, Natasha Bedingfield, Swizz Beatz, Cyndi Lauper, Bebe Winans, Angelique Kidjo, Voices of Afghanistan, Souad Massi, Engelbert Humperdink, Roberta Flack, David Sanborn, Joanne Shenandoah, David Crosby and Nelly Furtado. Special guests include Whoopi Goldberg, the evening's emcee, and NBC News Ann Curry.

Proceeds from the concert will be used to advance international relief efforts and fund a new scholarship named for Bassel Al Shahade, the SU graduate student killed earlier this year in Syria while making a documentary film on the violence in his homeland.

Questions can be directed to the Carrier Dome Box Office at 888-DOMETIX or 443-2121.


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Theater
 

7:30 PM, October 9



Jersey Boys
Broadway in Syracuse

Landmark Theatre
362 S. Salina St., Syracuse

"Too good to be true!" raves the New York Post for Jersey Boys, the 2006 Tony Award-winning Best Musical about Rock and Roll Hall of Famers The Four Seasons: Frankie Valli, Bob Gaudio, Tommy DeVito and Nick Massi. This is the story of how four blue-collar kids became one of the greatest successes in pop music history. They wrote their own songs, invented their own sounds and sold 175 million records worldwide -- all before they were 30! Jersey Boys, winner of the 2006 Grammy Award for Best Musical Show Album and most recently, the 2009 Olivier Award for Best New Musical, features their hit songs "Sherry," "Big Girls Don't Cry," "Rag Doll," "Oh What a Night" and "Can't Take My Eyes Off You."

Read a Review!


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Wednesday, October 10, 2012


Art
 

12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, October 10



Windows Project: TONY 2012
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

For this project, Jeffrey Einhorn created a site-specific installation "A Portrait of the Artist as a Giant Deflating Head" to address the fine line between performance art and sculpture while emphasizing wittily the unstable state of things or a disorder of a system.

This Window Projects exhibition is part of The Other New York: 2012, a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with 14 Syracuse partner art organizations to highlight artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 10



Lynette Blake: Within and Beyond
Weeks Art Gallery at Baltimore Woods

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

Lynette Blake's oil paintings draw the viewer in through complex layers of shape and color. The use of overlapping imagery conveys a depth that extends deep below the surface of the canvas. Objects, whether used directly or evoked by abstract shapes, float in and out of light illuminating them with a pervasive warm glow. The effect is otherworldly -- a feeling of being outside time and space is conveyed.

Blake has exhibited her work throughout the Northeast, and is currently represented locally by the Szozda Gallery in Syracuse, as well as national venues. She studied art at Brown University in Rhode Island and currently resides in Upstate NY.

More information on the Weeks Gallery at Baltimore Woods can be found at www.baltimorewoods.org.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 10



Gallery Exhibit: Brendan Rose & Michael Barletta: Paper, Staple, String
Onondaga Community College

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

"Paper, Staple, String" is a spatial installation, transforming Onondaga's Gallery into a dynamic field of suspended objects. Educational remnants (the discarded paperwork of students) are reclaimed as monochromatic pixels of a space defining cloud. This three-dimensional form transfigures as it intersects with the gallery walls, flattening and expanding against the two-dimensional surface.


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9:00 AM - 2:00 PM, October 10



TONY: 2012: Ink Geographies
Point of Contact Gallery

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

Feels like writing, but the artist is quick to make clear that it is not. Signs, representations ... of what? A mental process, a journey, from diverse points of origin through our individual timelines, our personal twists and turns. As a script emerges, something is set free, though it leaves a mark, an imprint. The artist's essential playground is a space to explore geometric archetypes that can only be found inside one another; all are one. A sacred mandala? Images contract and expand and there is order, not chaos. No more chaotic than life emerging from the womb, contraction, expansion; a beating heart, where life is felt, contraction, expansion...an ever-expanding universe, contracts only to further expand. We don't know how to will it into action. A similar experience with ink takes form in this experiment by Oscar Garcés. It flows from a playful doodle, "el virus," he calls it. And before you know it, connects with something else, an altered state of consciousness. Everything else disappears as it takes over.

The Point of Contact Gallery presents the first solo show by Cuban-born, Syracuse-based artist Oscar Garcés, as part of The Other New York: TONY 2012, a community-wide biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaboration among 14 venues in Syracuse. This program also commemorates the celebration of Hispanic Heritage Month at Point of Contact.

Born in Santiago, Cuba in 1987, Garcés came to the United States in 2000. During his years residing first in Florida, when he began to develop as a visual artist, Garcés received multiple recognitions, including a Golden Key Award for best portfolio by Scholastics. Later in Syracuse, Garcés won a "Best of Show" Award at the Community Folk Art Center in 2005. He has also shown his paintings at the Warehouse Gallery's Window Project and at La Casita Cultural Center Gallery.

TONY 2012: "The Other New York" seeks to highlight the work and talent of different rising artists from the Central New York area.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 10



Phonography
Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

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

Cell phone photography, featuring works of 75 Central New York and international artists. Amazing, imaginative, creative, innovative, fun photos you'll love!


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 10



Assembly-line Architecture: Repetition and Innovation in the Work of Marcel Breuer
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

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

The exhibit, curated by Teresa Harris, architectural historian and project coordinator for the Marcel Breuer Digital Archive, showcases original drawings, photographs and documents from Breuer's long career.

Like many modern architects, Marcel Breuer found inspiration in the repetition characteristic of industrial processes, often relying on modular units or a standard kit of parts to create his buildings and interiors. The limits imposed by these systems stimulated subtle formal and spatial innovation so that no two designs were exactly alike, despite common components.


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 10



Investigations
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
Slocum Hall Gallery
Syracuse University campus, Syracuse

An exhibition of the work and design process of Stephan Jaklitsch and Mark Gardner through sketches, models, renderings, construction drawings, and photographs of six projects. Their work addresses specific conditions of site, use, the psychology of experience, sustainability, techniques of construction craft in detail, and materiality of building.

Jaklitsch/Gardner Architects (J/GA) is an award-winning NYC-based design practice that focuses on urban scale projects, buildings, interiors, and objects. Award-winning projects include the Marc Jacobs Tokyo Flagship Building (2010); a bike rack for the NYC Dept. of Transportation that was exhibited at the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum (2008); and the Marc Jacobs International Showroom (2012).


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 10



The dB Cultural Revolution series by Decibel
Westcott Community Art Gallery

Price: Free
Westcott Community Center
Corner of Euclid Ave. and Westcott St., Syracuse

Propaganda images generated during the Cultural Revolution in China have been remixed to create commentary on the modern Cultural Revolution society is undergoing in the form of music, art, and media. Elements of the old and new are mixed together to evolve into something new.


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9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, October 10



Play on Light
Edgewood Gallery

Price: Free
Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd., Syracuse

Adriana Meiss: Pastel landscapes
John Franklin: Turned wood and sculptural vessels
Paul Riccardi: Pastel florals and still-lifes
Judy McCumber: Silver and gemstone jewelry


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 10



TONY: 2012 (The Other New York)
Community Folk Art Center

Price: Free
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

The Other New York: 2012 is a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaboration among 12 art organizations in Syracuse. This ambitious project aims to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties. The project will offer diverse arts venues and outdoor public spaces for contemporary creative expression on a scale not before seen in Syracuse. In addition, TONY: 2012 demonstrates the power of artistic partnerships to boost public awareness of the arts by presenting opportunities for the community to connect with exhibitions, programs, and events offered simultaneously throughout the city.

TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with ArtRage, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Punto de Contacto/Point of Contact, Red House Arts Center, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, and the City of Syracuse. Alternative art spaces in the form of freight containers will provide temporary exhibition/installation sites. The containers will be strategically located in the city to link arts venues and encourage visitors to walk and experience art along the way.

Community Folk Art Center TONY 2012 featured artists are Elizabeth Leader, Michael Moody, Abisay Puentes, Sandra Stephens, who each use their art to engage in a larger conversation about significant but often overlooked social issues, including racial identity and urban decay.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 10



TONY: 2012: Variography
Erie Canal Museum

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

This exhibit features Buffalo artist Michael Bosworth's "Variography" -- a pair of installations, one inside the historic Syracuse Weighlock Building and the other outside and directly across the former Erie Canal (now Erie Blvd.) from the Weighlock. Inside there will be four-foot tall brick columns containing magic-lantern projectors, while outside will stand a camera obscurae built of cement on heavy wooden tripods.

Michael Bosworth is a nationally exhibiting artist and a professor in the photography department of Villa Maria College. He received his M.F.A. from the University of New Mexico, a B.F.A. and B.A. at UB. His commissioned public art projects include Fluid Culture, Main Street/Art Street, and Herd About Buffalo.

The Erie Canal Museum is proud to be a part of The Other New York: 2012 (TONY: 2012), an unprecedented community-wide, multi-venue contemporary art exhibition. TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with ArtRage, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Onondaga Historical Association, Point of Contact, Rosamond Gifford Zoo, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, City of Syracuse and XL Projects.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 10



Drama From the Garden: New Work by Terry Askey-Cole
Gallery 54

Gallery 54
54 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

Terry Askey-Cole brings her love of nature and the outdoors to all her new pieces inspired by her beautiful gardens.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 10



Carl Hoffner Exhibition
Imagine

Imagine
38 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

An exhibition of limited-edition color lithographs and digital paintings by Fayetteville artist Carl Hoffner.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 10



Susan Worsham: Bittersweet/Bloodwork
Light Work Gallery

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

When Susan Worsham was just 18, her brother took his own life after severing his spinal cord in a motorcycle accident. As a young girl she had already lost her father to a heart attack, and finally in 2004, she lost her mother as well. In the words of Worsham, "Shortly after my mother passed I came across a set of antique veterinary slides. They were some of the most interesting things that I had ever seen. I framed ninety of them in a long wooden frame resembling the shape of the slide itself. It was the first piece of art that I made after my mother died. I called the piece a watercolor because of the collection of pastel colors, but it was also a sort of poem when you got close and read the titles ... Rabbit's Lung, Fowl's Spleen, and even Human Umbilical Cord. They seemed to hold beauty and death at the same time."

Worsham went on to photograph her old childhood home as well as her oldest neighbor, Margaret Daniel. Margaret is one of the last remaining threads from Worsham's childhood and was the last person to see her brother alive. She made him her homemade bread, and he finished the whole loaf before he shot himself. The story came full circle one day when Margaret brought out her dissection kit and microscope slides. She had been a biology teacher and was holding on to the same sort of slides that fascinated Worsham. Margaret's microscope and slides have since become a metaphor for Worsham's desire to look deeper into the landscape of her childhood--from the flora and fauna to the feelings, Margaret calls it "blood work."

In addition to Worsham's touching photographs made in and around Virginia, this exhibition features a selection of Margaret's dissection tools alongside her microscope, as well as audio recordings of their various conversations about plants, life, and death. All together, the photographs and accompaniments in Bittersweet/Bloodwork speak of the poetry of childhood, nature, discovery, love, and loss.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 10



TONY: 2012
Light Work Gallery

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

Light Work is pleased to announce the exhibition "The Other New York: 2012," featuring the photographic work of Sarah Averill, Bang-Geul Han, Mark McLoughlin, Jan Nagle, and Matthew Walker. This exhibition is part of a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaborion among 14 art organizations in Syracuse. This ambitious project aims to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 10



Syracuse Cultural Workers 100 @ 30
Onondaga Historical Association

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

100 posters celebrating 30 years. Since 1982, SCW has published and distributed over 700 posters across North America and a bit on other continents. This selection of 100 titles represents the best, the boldest, and the oldest.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 10



Take No Prisoners: Political Cartoons Over Time and Place
Onondaga Historical Association

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

Three well-known Central New York political cartoonists, Joe Glisson, Tim Atseff, and Frank Cammuso, are the featured cartoonists for an exhibition entitled "Take No Prisoners: Political Cartoons Over Time and Place." With insightful humor, these artists and their historic predecessors produced a wide variety of editorial cartoons that illustrated important issues of their time. Starting with cartoons from the Civil War era through the present day, "Take No Prisoners" is an opportunity to experience historic subjects as the current events they once were, and to see how election issues of the past compare with those of the present-day.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 10



Sight Unseen: Stereographs from the OHA Collection, 1850-1930
Onondaga Historical Association

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

Since OHA's inception, it has amassed a collection of over 2,000 stereographs, or stereo views, of Onondaga County and beyond. Archived in the research holdings, these 3-D photographs have never before been exhibited. Guest curator Colleen Woolpert offers an overview of the collection, providing insight into the little known history of stereo photography while taking us back into the past with the aid of exhibition stereoscopes. The exhibit includes Syracuse views taken by local photographers as well as nationally-marketed views, historic stereoscopes, books, and related 3-D ephemera. It also looks at the combined industries of photography, publishing, manufacturing and marketing that contributed to the enormous popularity of the stereograph.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 10



TONY: 2012: "Manifest Destiny and the American West" and "Last House"
Onondaga Historical Association

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

These exhibits are mounted as part of the The Other New York (TONY): 2012, Syracuse's art biennial. OHA's TONY: 2012 exhibits are artistically presented interpretations of dynamic social trends that are part of the historic legacy of Central New York.

In a three-dimensional display employing nearly 1,000 images set in glass jars, "Manifest Destiny and the American West," an exhibit by Buffalo artist Robert Hirsch, asks the visitor to think about how our nation's geographic progression across the continent has shaped American culture. The desire to exploit the salt brine reserves on Onondaga Lake contributed to a westward migration of settlers across Central New York in the post-American Revolution era, while the construction of the Erie Canal enhanced this movement through the 19th century and enabled many travelers to reach lands in the farther reaches of the American continent.

"Last House" is a multi-channel video installation by media artist Carl Lee that explores the aesthetics and means of a house demolition in Buffalo. Cities like Buffalo and Syracuse are faced with a large number of abandoned houses. This video asks us to think about what we gain and lose in demolishing them. This installation will be accompanied by three paintings by Western New York artist Amy Greenan of vacant houses in Syracuse awaiting an uncertain future, including "Not Here, Not Now," her interpretation of 711 Tully Street, which seems poised to have a different fate on Syracuse's Near West Side than that if the house in Last House.

Onondaga Historical Association is proud to be one of 14 Central New York venues for TONY: 2012. TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with ArtRage, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Onondaga Historical Association, Point of Contact, Rosamond Gifford Zoo, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, City of Syracuse, and XL Projects.


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10:00 AM - 10:00 PM, October 10



Faces, Forms and Illusions: Works by Scott Hutchison
Redhouse

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

Scott Hutchison is a painter living in the Washington DC metro area. His work combines contemporary realism and animation. An exploration of the human figure continues to be the leitmotiv of Hutchison's work with a long-standing interest in self portraiture.

Hutchison says:
"My animations combine traditional painting and drawing techniques with digital technology to create animated portraits, which are displayed on small LCD panels, or projected, large-scale. Dozens of individual stills portray my face, changing only slightly from one image to the next. When the images are unified digitally, an animation is created. Each video is comprised of multiple painted or drawn self-portraits that, although similar, possess slight variations of color and treatment. When animated, the paint and mark move across the surface, resulting in a portrait that is in constant flux."


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 10



Altered Environments: Works of Willson Cummer and Laura Wellner
Szozda Gallery

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

This show brings together two artists, Laura J. Wellner and Willson Cummer, who view environments in different ways but whose works compliment each other's.

Wellner always tries to create something 'extraordinary out of the ordinary elements of nature' in her mixed media paintings, thereby, one might say, seeing something that's not physically there. Fine art photographer Willson Cummer gives viewers another dimension to familiar landmarks by including man-made intrusions that 'explore humanity's place in the environment.'

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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 10



Framed Un Framed
601 Tully

601 Tully St.
Syracuse

An exhibition of artists with a dual practice, featuring Abby Carter, Samantha Harmon, Lori Hawke, Stephanie Koenig, Lynette K Stephenson, and Marion Wilson.



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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, October 10



Karl Schrag: Memories and Premonitions
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

The Syracuse University Art Galleries is celebrating the career and life of Karl Schrag, American painter and printmaker, who would have been 100 years old this year. "Karl Schrag: Memories and Premonitions" is the first major examination of the artist's work since his death in 1995. The exhibition includes 70 original works of art by the influential artist, including paintings, prints and drawings.

Syracuse University has had a long and rewarding association with Karl Schrag and his family. It began in 1962 with a gift of a gouache painting titled "Coast in Autumn." Later the relationship grew with the first of numerous exhibitions, more gifts of artwork, and occasional lectures to students in the University's School of Art. Some 50 years later, S.U.'s art collection is much richer because of the 250-plus Karl Schrag artworks we maintain, and the continued support of Schrag Family.

2012 is also the centenary year of Karl Schrag's birth and gives us an opportunity to reinvestigate the talent, imagination, and sensitivity Schrag brought to his landscapes, still-life paintings, and portraits. A master of color, light, composition, and draftsmanship, Schrag captures nature and its great forces through an investigation of the lasting impressions each of us retain through experience. He engages his viewer with subtle mark making as well as with the bold calligraphic strokes so often associated with his work. His palette of almost Fauvist intensity adds dimension and passion to the landscapes he created.

Schrag's art career spanned more than 60 years and he had strong ties to the New York City art scene. After studying at the Art Students League, he joined S.W. Hayter's prestigious printmaking studio Atelier 17, working alongside artists Miró, Chagall and Jackson Pollock. Schrag was named director of the Atelier in 1950 and later began a long teaching career at Cooper Union, where he taught drawing and graphic arts from 1954-1968. Schrag had a direct impact on many of his students, including the Syracuse University-based artist Jerome Witkin. A student of Schrag at Cooper Union and a well-established contemporary artist, Witkin has commented on Schrags masterful handling of the landscape, and the evocative power of his vision.

The art selected for this exhibit will convey the artist's ability to see the landscape as if for the first time, the surprise of that special view, the recognition of his ability to feel wonder when looking at nature or figures, and the reward associated with seeing the world through his eyes.


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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, October 10



TONY: 2012
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

The Other New York: 2012 (Tony: 2012) is an ambitious project that aims to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties. The project offers diverse arts venues and outdoor public spaces for contemporary creative expression on a scale not before seen in Syracuse. In addition, TONY: 2012 demonstrates the power of artistic partnerships to boost public awareness of the arts by presenting opportunities for the community to connect with exhibitions, programs, and events offered simultaneously throughout the city.

The artists included in the SUArt Galleries TONY: 2012 are Tammy Brackett, Juan Cruz, Sara Di Donato, Matthew Glaysher, Amy Greenan, Sue Huggins Leopard, Barbara Page, James Skvarch.

The SUArt Galleries is one of 14 venues participating in this citywide celebration of the visual arts. Please take the time to visit the exhibitions at the other TONY venues to see the wealth of talent that resides and works upstate.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, October 10



Prophecy: Peter B. Jones
Everson Museum of Art

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

"Prophecy" is a timely exhibition pertaining to Indigenous prophecies. By incorporating themes of ecology, creation, demise and the future according to the Mayan calendar, traditional Iroquois teachings and other cultural beliefs, Jones provides a visual representation of the foretold truths.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, October 10



The Other New York: 2012
Everson Museum of Art

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

The Other New York: 2012 is a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaboration among 12 art organizations in Syracuse. This ambitious project aims to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties. The project will offer diverse arts venues and outdoor public spaces for contemporary creative expression on a scale not before seen in Syracuse. In addition, TONY: 2012 demonstrates the power of artistic partnerships to boost public awareness of the arts by presenting opportunities for the community to connect with exhibitions, programs, and events offered simultaneously throughout the city.

TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with ArtRage-The Norton Putter Gallery, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Onondaga Historical Association, Punto de Contacto/Point of Contact, Red House Arts Center, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, City of Syracuse and XL Projects.

Alternative art spaces in the form of freight containers will provide temporary exhibition/installation sites. The containers will be strategically located in the city to link arts venues and encourage visitors to walk and experience art along the way.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, October 10



Puerto Rican Bomba and Plena: A Graphic History
La Casita Cultural Center

Price: Free
La Casita Cultural Center
109 Otisco St., Syracuse

The exhibit presents the works of nine Puerto Rican master artists who were commissioned to create screen prints to capture the spirit of the annual Bomba and Plena Festivals held in Puerto Rico. Their posters have been collected and preserved by the Institute of Puerto Rican Culture in San Juan.

Featured artists are José R. Alicea, Luis Alonso, Luis Germán Cajigas, Jesús Cardona, Sixto Cotto, David Goitia, Samuel Lind, Luis Maisonet Ramos, and Nelson Sambolin.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, October 10



Lov U
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

"Lov U" is a multimedia installation by Senga Nengudi.

Colorado-based Senga Nengudi is a key figure of the Black Arts Movement in the 1970s and 1980s. Known primarily for performance-based art installations, her work focuses on movement and the human body, is multidisciplinary in nature and international in scope, with cultural references to Africa, the African Diaspora, and Asia. For her multimedia, performance-based exhibition "Lov U," Nengudi explores the physical senses of being human, and includes photographs and video to reflect on the essence of love. Drawn to discarded, everyday materials, the ephemerality of Nengudi's work is a metaphor for life's transience.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, October 10



The Other New York (TONY): 2012
XL Projects

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

XL Projects will present the work of seven artists selected for "The Other New York (TONY): 2012," a communitywide, multi-venue contemporary art exhibition featuring artists currently living in New York State outside of the New York City metropolitan area.

The artists showing work at XL Projects -- Michael Barletta, Daniel Buckingham, Jay Carrier, Meredith Davenport, Kara Daving, Tom DeLooza, and Fernando Orellana -- are among the 63 artists selected from 235 submissions for TONY: 2012. The work that will be on view at XL includes large sculpture, video, photography, kinetic sculpture, large-scale painting, and a large window graphic across the front of the venue.

TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with 14 art institutions and cultural organizations in Syracuse: ArtRage, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Onondaga Historical Association, Point of Contact, Rosamond Gifford Zoo, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, City of Syracuse, and XL Projects.

For more information, contact Andrew Havenhand at ahavenhand@yahoo.com. XL Projects may be contacted at 315-442-2542 during gallery hours. For more information about TONY: 2012 and the other exhibiting artists and venues, visit everson.org.


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1:00 PM - 6:00 PM, October 10



life. love. time travel.
Echo

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

Group show of works by over 20 artists.


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1:00 PM - 5:00 PM, October 10



Raw Revelations: The Reunion of Hand Tools and Production
The Warehouse Gallery

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

In recent years, the connection between process and product has slowly separated, creating a rift between the two. Consumers often do not know who is designing and constructing the products they buy. However, a rising movement is reuniting the experience of creating something by hand and the finished product. Craftspeople worldwide are continuing the tradition of working with their hands and their cherished hand tools, forging a connection with what they make.

This new exhibition illuminates the idea of this connection between history, design and craftsmanship through a sensory experience for the viewers. The show invites the public to learn about the history of hand tools and woodworking, witness part of the process of creating a wooden stool by hand and find out how to reconnect the process of creating something with the final product.

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


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2:00 PM - 7:00 PM, October 10



TONY: 2012 (The Other New York)
ArtRage Gallery

Price: Free
ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave., Syracuse

The Everson Biennial, titled "The Other New York: 2012," is being exhibited in community art galleries across Syracuse this year. ArtRage is honored to participate by exhibiting the work of four artists chosen in collaboration with the Everson Museum.

Ben Altman, Neil Chowdhury, Bob Gates and Paul Pearce, the four photographers whose works comprise this exhibit, present work that, while distinctive, shares a key characteristic. All are documentary photographers who are a bit wary of being seen as truth tellers. Fully understanding that the "objective photograph" is a myth, their photographic work -- both in the process of its creation and the images presented -- casts into doubt our traditional notions of documentation, objectivity and veracity. Nonetheless, each photographer is visualizing a certain truth, which may be one we do not know, or one that we prefer to avoid knowing. Participating in the artist's unflinching gaze, we become complicit witnesses to situations -- torture, poverty, social class, and the effects of war -- often conveniently rendered invisible.

Read a review!


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Lecture
 

12:15 PM, October 10



Lunchtime Lectures: Gallery Talk for Karl Schrag: Memories and Premonitions
Syracuse University Art Museum
Featuring Domenic Iacono

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

Lunchtime Lectures will begin its series with a lecture by Director Domenic Iacono. Iacono will give a gallery talk on the current exhibition Karl Schrag: Memories and Premonitions, which he curated.


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7:00 PM, October 10



The Fearless Eye: TONY:2012 Artists' Talk
ArtRage Gallery

Price: Free
ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave., Syracuse

Join our TONY:2012 artists as they explore their work with you. Each will make a 15-minute presentation followed by your questions. Presenting artists will be Neil Chowdhury, Bob Gates, Paul W. Pearce, and Ben Altman.


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7:30 PM, October 10



350: The Most Important Number in the World
University Lectures
Featuring Bill McKibben

Price: Free
Hendricks Chapel
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Bill McKibben is one of America's best known environmentalists. He has written books that have shaped public perception--and public action--on climate change, alternative energy and the need for more localized economies. McKibben is the founder of 350.org, a global grassroots climate change initiative that organized thousands of events in most of the world's nations on Oct. 24, 2009.

McKibben's seminal books include The End of Nature, widely seen as the first book on climate change for a general audience, and Deep Economy, a bold challenge to move beyond "growth" as the paramount economic ideal and to pursue prosperity in a more local direction--an idea that is the cornerstone of much sustainability discourse today.

A former New Yorker staff writer and Guggenheim Fellow, he writes for various magazines, including Rolling Stone, The Atlantic, National Geographic and The New York Review of Books. In 2007, McKibben founded stepitup07.org to demand that Congress curb carbon emissions that would cut global warming pollution 80 percent by 2050. On April 14, 2007, as part of the effort, McKibben helped lead over 1,000 demonstrations, across all 50 states, a watershed moment described as the largest day of protest against climate change in the nation's history.

In this talk, McKibben will describe the science of climate change and talk about the inspiring global movement that he's led to help change the world's understanding of its peril, and spur the reforms necessary to get the planet back to safety.


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Music
 

12:30 PM - 1:30 PM, October 10



Martha Grener, flute; Gerald Zampino; Maryna Mazhukhova, piano
Civic Morning Musicals

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

Works for flute, clarinet and piano including Libby Larsen Barn Dances, Daniel Dorff Perennials, and more.

This recital is presented in collaboration with The Other New York (TONY: 2012) art exhibits.


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7:00 PM, October 10



Concert of Remembrance for Bassel Shahade
Syracuse University Setnor School of Music
Malek Jandali and Mohamed Alsiadi

Price: $25 adults, $12 students
Setnor Auditorium, Crouse College
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Syracuse University will host a day of remembrance for slain Syrian film student Bassel Shahade on Wednesday, Oct. 10. Shahade, a Fulbright Scholar and native of Damascus, Syria, was killed in Homs, Syria, on May 28 while working as a citizen journalist. He was pursuing a master of fine arts degree in film in VPA's Department of Transmedia.

The day of remembrance will include a concert featuring Jandali and Alsiadi. Shahade's short films will also be screened.

Mohamed Alsiadi has an extensive background in music theory, composition, performance and conducting. As one of the first students of the Damascus Music Conservatory in Syria, he studied these subjects while specializing as a performer of the Middle Eastern lute, oboe and piano. While still a student, he built on his studies as an instructor of music performance and theory in Syria. He first taught music at the Aleppo Academy and subsequently instructed lute performers at the Aleppo Youth Academy, became an educator at the Damascus Arab Music Institute and taught courses on Arabic music theories and music history at the Damascus Music Conservatory.

Throughout his career as a musician, Alsiadi has undertaken research in music history and theory. As a lute soloist, he has performed in New York, Algeria, Egypt, Lebanon, Spain and Syria. As a conductor, he has led orchestral and choral ensembles in Beirut, Cairo and Damascus. As a doctoral candidate, his research interests include issues related to Arab American identity post-9/11; the impact of East-West relations on contemporary Arabic music and literature; Aleppian Waslah performance in the diaspora; and the use of Islam to democratize groups and nations. Learn more at www.alsiadi.com.

Born in Germany to Syrian parents, award-winning composer and pianist Malek Jandali is recognized as a leading figure in today's piano world. His musical career as a concert pianist began in 1988 after he won first prize at the National Young Artists Competition, followed by the 1997 Outstanding Musical Performer Award. A prolific composer, Jandali's works have received critical acclaim in major newspapers throughout Europe and North America. He is the first Arab musician to arrange the oldest music notation in the world, which was featured in his 2008 album Echoes from Ugarit" (Soul b Music).

In 2011, Jandali received the Freedom of Expression award for his song Watani Ana (I am my Homeland)" as well as his activism in the Arab Spring movement for human rights and democracy. His latest album Emessa" (CD Baby) includes original compositions recorded with the Russian Philharmonic Orchestra. The music was inspired by the 2011 historic Syrian revolution and courageous stand of the people against brutality and dictatorship.

For more information on the events in honor of Bassel Shahade, please visit news.syr.edu/bassel-shahade.

Free and accessible parking is available in the Q-1 lot, with additional free parking available in the Irving Garage. Patrons should mention to the parking attendant that they are attending the concert.


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8:00 PM, October 10



Rebelution, with Passafire, Through the Roots
Westcott Theater

Westcott Theater
524 Westcott St., Syracuse


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9:00 PM, October 10



Legends of Jazz Series: Pat Metheny Unity Band
Onondaga Community College

Price: $35
Storer Auditorium
Onondaga Community College, Syracuse

The 19-time Grammy winner appears with Chris Potter, Ben Williams, and Antonio Sanchez.

Tickets available at Sound Garden, 310 W. Jefferson St., Armory Square in downtown Syracuse. Tickets will be available on a first-come, first-served basis and must be purchased in pairs. There is a limit of two tickets per customer. Please note that the Sound Garden Box Office accepts cash only.

For more information on the Legends of Jazz series, visit the website.


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Poetry/Reading
 

5:30 PM, October 10



Ira Sadoff
Raymond Carver Reading Series

Price: Free
Gifford Auditorium, Huntington Beard Crouse Hall
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Ira Sadoff, author of eight poetry collections and a novel, currently teaches at Colby College and Drew University. He has been hailed by critics as a "master of language, concentration, vision, language, irony." The reading will be preceded by a question and answer session from 3:45-4:30 pm. Parking is available in SU's paid lots.


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Theater
 

7:30 PM, October 10



Jersey Boys
Broadway in Syracuse

Landmark Theatre
362 S. Salina St., Syracuse

"Too good to be true!" raves the New York Post for Jersey Boys, the 2006 Tony Award-winning Best Musical about Rock and Roll Hall of Famers The Four Seasons: Frankie Valli, Bob Gaudio, Tommy DeVito and Nick Massi. This is the story of how four blue-collar kids became one of the greatest successes in pop music history. They wrote their own songs, invented their own sounds and sold 175 million records worldwide -- all before they were 30! Jersey Boys, winner of the 2006 Grammy Award for Best Musical Show Album and most recently, the 2009 Olivier Award for Best New Musical, features their hit songs "Sherry," "Big Girls Don't Cry," "Rag Doll," "Oh What a Night" and "Can't Take My Eyes Off You."

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7:30 PM, October 10



Moby Dick
Syracuse Stage
Peter Amster, director

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

Alive with a soundscape of 16 authentic sea shanties and performed by an ensemble of nine, this highly physical adaption cuts to the core of Melville's searing narrative and plays with the fury of a Nantucket sleigh ride. A young man seeks adventure on a whaling vessel and finds himself a pawn in an obsessive pursuit of vengeance that threatens death and destruction for all. Director Peter Amster returns to guide the ensemble in this thrilling and critically acclaimed telling of a classic American tale. Adapted for the stage by Julian Rad from the book by Herman Melville

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8:00 PM, October 10



Assassins
Redhouse

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

This Sondheim musical explores the history of presidential assassination in America, from John Wilkes Booth to John Hinckley Jr. Assassins explores how society interprets the American Dream, marginalizes outsiders, and rewrites and sanitizes its collective history. A perfect evening of theatre that examines the state of contemporary politics during this election season. Music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim; book by John Weidman.

There will be a talkback session following each performance.

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Thursday, October 11, 2012


Art
 

12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, October 11



Windows Project: TONY 2012
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

For this project, Jeffrey Einhorn created a site-specific installation "A Portrait of the Artist as a Giant Deflating Head" to address the fine line between performance art and sculpture while emphasizing wittily the unstable state of things or a disorder of a system.

This Window Projects exhibition is part of The Other New York: 2012, a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with 14 Syracuse partner art organizations to highlight artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 11



Lynette Blake: Within and Beyond
Weeks Art Gallery at Baltimore Woods

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

Lynette Blake's oil paintings draw the viewer in through complex layers of shape and color. The use of overlapping imagery conveys a depth that extends deep below the surface of the canvas. Objects, whether used directly or evoked by abstract shapes, float in and out of light illuminating them with a pervasive warm glow. The effect is otherworldly -- a feeling of being outside time and space is conveyed.

Blake has exhibited her work throughout the Northeast, and is currently represented locally by the Szozda Gallery in Syracuse, as well as national venues. She studied art at Brown University in Rhode Island and currently resides in Upstate NY.

More information on the Weeks Gallery at Baltimore Woods can be found at www.baltimorewoods.org.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 11



Gallery Exhibit: Brendan Rose & Michael Barletta: Paper, Staple, String
Onondaga Community College

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

"Paper, Staple, String" is a spatial installation, transforming Onondaga's Gallery into a dynamic field of suspended objects. Educational remnants (the discarded paperwork of students) are reclaimed as monochromatic pixels of a space defining cloud. This three-dimensional form transfigures as it intersects with the gallery walls, flattening and expanding against the two-dimensional surface.


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9:00 AM - 2:00 PM, October 11



TONY: 2012: Ink Geographies
Point of Contact Gallery

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

Feels like writing, but the artist is quick to make clear that it is not. Signs, representations ... of what? A mental process, a journey, from diverse points of origin through our individual timelines, our personal twists and turns. As a script emerges, something is set free, though it leaves a mark, an imprint. The artist's essential playground is a space to explore geometric archetypes that can only be found inside one another; all are one. A sacred mandala? Images contract and expand and there is order, not chaos. No more chaotic than life emerging from the womb, contraction, expansion; a beating heart, where life is felt, contraction, expansion...an ever-expanding universe, contracts only to further expand. We don't know how to will it into action. A similar experience with ink takes form in this experiment by Oscar Garcés. It flows from a playful doodle, "el virus," he calls it. And before you know it, connects with something else, an altered state of consciousness. Everything else disappears as it takes over.

The Point of Contact Gallery presents the first solo show by Cuban-born, Syracuse-based artist Oscar Garcés, as part of The Other New York: TONY 2012, a community-wide biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaboration among 14 venues in Syracuse. This program also commemorates the celebration of Hispanic Heritage Month at Point of Contact.

Born in Santiago, Cuba in 1987, Garcés came to the United States in 2000. During his years residing first in Florida, when he began to develop as a visual artist, Garcés received multiple recognitions, including a Golden Key Award for best portfolio by Scholastics. Later in Syracuse, Garcés won a "Best of Show" Award at the Community Folk Art Center in 2005. He has also shown his paintings at the Warehouse Gallery's Window Project and at La Casita Cultural Center Gallery.

TONY 2012: "The Other New York" seeks to highlight the work and talent of different rising artists from the Central New York area.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 11



Phonography
Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

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

Cell phone photography, featuring works of 75 Central New York and international artists. Amazing, imaginative, creative, innovative, fun photos you'll love!


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9:00 AM - 7:00 PM, October 11



Assembly-line Architecture: Repetition and Innovation in the Work of Marcel Breuer
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

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

The exhibit, curated by Teresa Harris, architectural historian and project coordinator for the Marcel Breuer Digital Archive, showcases original drawings, photographs and documents from Breuer's long career.

Like many modern architects, Marcel Breuer found inspiration in the repetition characteristic of industrial processes, often relying on modular units or a standard kit of parts to create his buildings and interiors. The limits imposed by these systems stimulated subtle formal and spatial innovation so that no two designs were exactly alike, despite common components.


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 11



Investigations
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
Slocum Hall Gallery
Syracuse University campus, Syracuse

An exhibition of the work and design process of Stephan Jaklitsch and Mark Gardner through sketches, models, renderings, construction drawings, and photographs of six projects. Their work addresses specific conditions of site, use, the psychology of experience, sustainability, techniques of construction craft in detail, and materiality of building.

Jaklitsch/Gardner Architects (J/GA) is an award-winning NYC-based design practice that focuses on urban scale projects, buildings, interiors, and objects. Award-winning projects include the Marc Jacobs Tokyo Flagship Building (2010); a bike rack for the NYC Dept. of Transportation that was exhibited at the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum (2008); and the Marc Jacobs International Showroom (2012).


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 11



The dB Cultural Revolution series by Decibel
Westcott Community Art Gallery

Price: Free
Westcott Community Center
Corner of Euclid Ave. and Westcott St., Syracuse

Propaganda images generated during the Cultural Revolution in China have been remixed to create commentary on the modern Cultural Revolution society is undergoing in the form of music, art, and media. Elements of the old and new are mixed together to evolve into something new.


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9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, October 11



Play on Light
Edgewood Gallery

Price: Free
Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd., Syracuse

Adriana Meiss: Pastel landscapes
John Franklin: Turned wood and sculptural vessels
Paul Riccardi: Pastel florals and still-lifes
Judy McCumber: Silver and gemstone jewelry


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 11



TONY: 2012 (The Other New York)
Community Folk Art Center

Price: Free
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

The Other New York: 2012 is a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaboration among 12 art organizations in Syracuse. This ambitious project aims to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties. The project will offer diverse arts venues and outdoor public spaces for contemporary creative expression on a scale not before seen in Syracuse. In addition, TONY: 2012 demonstrates the power of artistic partnerships to boost public awareness of the arts by presenting opportunities for the community to connect with exhibitions, programs, and events offered simultaneously throughout the city.

TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with ArtRage, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Punto de Contacto/Point of Contact, Red House Arts Center, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, and the City of Syracuse. Alternative art spaces in the form of freight containers will provide temporary exhibition/installation sites. The containers will be strategically located in the city to link arts venues and encourage visitors to walk and experience art along the way.

Community Folk Art Center TONY 2012 featured artists are Elizabeth Leader, Michael Moody, Abisay Puentes, Sandra Stephens, who each use their art to engage in a larger conversation about significant but often overlooked social issues, including racial identity and urban decay.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 11



TONY: 2012: Variography
Erie Canal Museum

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

This exhibit features Buffalo artist Michael Bosworth's "Variography" -- a pair of installations, one inside the historic Syracuse Weighlock Building and the other outside and directly across the former Erie Canal (now Erie Blvd.) from the Weighlock. Inside there will be four-foot tall brick columns containing magic-lantern projectors, while outside will stand a camera obscurae built of cement on heavy wooden tripods.

Michael Bosworth is a nationally exhibiting artist and a professor in the photography department of Villa Maria College. He received his M.F.A. from the University of New Mexico, a B.F.A. and B.A. at UB. His commissioned public art projects include Fluid Culture, Main Street/Art Street, and Herd About Buffalo.

The Erie Canal Museum is proud to be a part of The Other New York: 2012 (TONY: 2012), an unprecedented community-wide, multi-venue contemporary art exhibition. TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with ArtRage, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Onondaga Historical Association, Point of Contact, Rosamond Gifford Zoo, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, City of Syracuse and XL Projects.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 11



Drama From the Garden: New Work by Terry Askey-Cole
Gallery 54

Gallery 54
54 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

Terry Askey-Cole brings her love of nature and the outdoors to all her new pieces inspired by her beautiful gardens.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 11



Carl Hoffner Exhibition
Imagine

Imagine
38 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

An exhibition of limited-edition color lithographs and digital paintings by Fayetteville artist Carl Hoffner.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 11



Susan Worsham: Bittersweet/Bloodwork
Light Work Gallery

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

When Susan Worsham was just 18, her brother took his own life after severing his spinal cord in a motorcycle accident. As a young girl she had already lost her father to a heart attack, and finally in 2004, she lost her mother as well. In the words of Worsham, "Shortly after my mother passed I came across a set of antique veterinary slides. They were some of the most interesting things that I had ever seen. I framed ninety of them in a long wooden frame resembling the shape of the slide itself. It was the first piece of art that I made after my mother died. I called the piece a watercolor because of the collection of pastel colors, but it was also a sort of poem when you got close and read the titles ... Rabbit's Lung, Fowl's Spleen, and even Human Umbilical Cord. They seemed to hold beauty and death at the same time."

Worsham went on to photograph her old childhood home as well as her oldest neighbor, Margaret Daniel. Margaret is one of the last remaining threads from Worsham's childhood and was the last person to see her brother alive. She made him her homemade bread, and he finished the whole loaf before he shot himself. The story came full circle one day when Margaret brought out her dissection kit and microscope slides. She had been a biology teacher and was holding on to the same sort of slides that fascinated Worsham. Margaret's microscope and slides have since become a metaphor for Worsham's desire to look deeper into the landscape of her childhood--from the flora and fauna to the feelings, Margaret calls it "blood work."

In addition to Worsham's touching photographs made in and around Virginia, this exhibition features a selection of Margaret's dissection tools alongside her microscope, as well as audio recordings of their various conversations about plants, life, and death. All together, the photographs and accompaniments in Bittersweet/Bloodwork speak of the poetry of childhood, nature, discovery, love, and loss.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 11



TONY: 2012
Light Work Gallery

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

Light Work is pleased to announce the exhibition "The Other New York: 2012," featuring the photographic work of Sarah Averill, Bang-Geul Han, Mark McLoughlin, Jan Nagle, and Matthew Walker. This exhibition is part of a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaborion among 14 art organizations in Syracuse. This ambitious project aims to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 11



Take No Prisoners: Political Cartoons Over Time and Place
Onondaga Historical Association

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

Three well-known Central New York political cartoonists, Joe Glisson, Tim Atseff, and Frank Cammuso, are the featured cartoonists for an exhibition entitled "Take No Prisoners: Political Cartoons Over Time and Place." With insightful humor, these artists and their historic predecessors produced a wide variety of editorial cartoons that illustrated important issues of their time. Starting with cartoons from the Civil War era through the present day, "Take No Prisoners" is an opportunity to experience historic subjects as the current events they once were, and to see how election issues of the past compare with those of the present-day.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 11



Syracuse Cultural Workers 100 @ 30
Onondaga Historical Association

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

100 posters celebrating 30 years. Since 1982, SCW has published and distributed over 700 posters across North America and a bit on other continents. This selection of 100 titles represents the best, the boldest, and the oldest.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 11



TONY: 2012: "Manifest Destiny and the American West" and "Last House"
Onondaga Historical Association

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

These exhibits are mounted as part of the The Other New York (TONY): 2012, Syracuse's art biennial. OHA's TONY: 2012 exhibits are artistically presented interpretations of dynamic social trends that are part of the historic legacy of Central New York.

In a three-dimensional display employing nearly 1,000 images set in glass jars, "Manifest Destiny and the American West," an exhibit by Buffalo artist Robert Hirsch, asks the visitor to think about how our nation's geographic progression across the continent has shaped American culture. The desire to exploit the salt brine reserves on Onondaga Lake contributed to a westward migration of settlers across Central New York in the post-American Revolution era, while the construction of the Erie Canal enhanced this movement through the 19th century and enabled many travelers to reach lands in the farther reaches of the American continent.

"Last House" is a multi-channel video installation by media artist Carl Lee that explores the aesthetics and means of a house demolition in Buffalo. Cities like Buffalo and Syracuse are faced with a large number of abandoned houses. This video asks us to think about what we gain and lose in demolishing them. This installation will be accompanied by three paintings by Western New York artist Amy Greenan of vacant houses in Syracuse awaiting an uncertain future, including "Not Here, Not Now," her interpretation of 711 Tully Street, which seems poised to have a different fate on Syracuse's Near West Side than that if the house in Last House.

Onondaga Historical Association is proud to be one of 14 Central New York venues for TONY: 2012. TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with ArtRage, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Onondaga Historical Association, Point of Contact, Rosamond Gifford Zoo, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, City of Syracuse, and XL Projects.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 11



Sight Unseen: Stereographs from the OHA Collection, 1850-1930
Onondaga Historical Association

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

Since OHA's inception, it has amassed a collection of over 2,000 stereographs, or stereo views, of Onondaga County and beyond. Archived in the research holdings, these 3-D photographs have never before been exhibited. Guest curator Colleen Woolpert offers an overview of the collection, providing insight into the little known history of stereo photography while taking us back into the past with the aid of exhibition stereoscopes. The exhibit includes Syracuse views taken by local photographers as well as nationally-marketed views, historic stereoscopes, books, and related 3-D ephemera. It also looks at the combined industries of photography, publishing, manufacturing and marketing that contributed to the enormous popularity of the stereograph.


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10:00 AM - 10:00 PM, October 11



Faces, Forms and Illusions: Works by Scott Hutchison
Redhouse

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

Scott Hutchison is a painter living in the Washington DC metro area. His work combines contemporary realism and animation. An exploration of the human figure continues to be the leitmotiv of Hutchison's work with a long-standing interest in self portraiture.

Hutchison says:
"My animations combine traditional painting and drawing techniques with digital technology to create animated portraits, which are displayed on small LCD panels, or projected, large-scale. Dozens of individual stills portray my face, changing only slightly from one image to the next. When the images are unified digitally, an animation is created. Each video is comprised of multiple painted or drawn self-portraits that, although similar, possess slight variations of color and treatment. When animated, the paint and mark move across the surface, resulting in a portrait that is in constant flux."


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 11



Altered Environments: Works of Willson Cummer and Laura Wellner
Szozda Gallery

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

This show brings together two artists, Laura J. Wellner and Willson Cummer, who view environments in different ways but whose works compliment each other's.

Wellner always tries to create something 'extraordinary out of the ordinary elements of nature' in her mixed media paintings, thereby, one might say, seeing something that's not physically there. Fine art photographer Willson Cummer gives viewers another dimension to familiar landmarks by including man-made intrusions that 'explore humanity's place in the environment.'

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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 11



Framed Un Framed
601 Tully

601 Tully St.
Syracuse

An exhibition of artists with a dual practice, featuring Abby Carter, Samantha Harmon, Lori Hawke, Stephanie Koenig, Lynette K Stephenson, and Marion Wilson.



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11:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 11



Harvest
Gandee Gallery

Gandee Gallery
7846 Main St., Fabius

A group exhibition of Central New York artists which explores the inherit beauty of food and farming. It is during this time of year that the fruits of a farmer's labor are most appreciated, and preparation for winter, a time of hibernation and dormancy in the natural world, commences. The artists in Harvest celebrate this annual transition. The show will include photography, painting, pastel, and ceramics. Participating artists include Lisa Barker, Bob Gates, Wendy Harris, Jeremy Randall, Lucie Wellner, and Jamie Young.


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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, October 11



Karl Schrag: Memories and Premonitions
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

The Syracuse University Art Galleries is celebrating the career and life of Karl Schrag, American painter and printmaker, who would have been 100 years old this year. "Karl Schrag: Memories and Premonitions" is the first major examination of the artist's work since his death in 1995. The exhibition includes 70 original works of art by the influential artist, including paintings, prints and drawings.

Syracuse University has had a long and rewarding association with Karl Schrag and his family. It began in 1962 with a gift of a gouache painting titled "Coast in Autumn." Later the relationship grew with the first of numerous exhibitions, more gifts of artwork, and occasional lectures to students in the University's School of Art. Some 50 years later, S.U.'s art collection is much richer because of the 250-plus Karl Schrag artworks we maintain, and the continued support of Schrag Family.

2012 is also the centenary year of Karl Schrag's birth and gives us an opportunity to reinvestigate the talent, imagination, and sensitivity Schrag brought to his landscapes, still-life paintings, and portraits. A master of color, light, composition, and draftsmanship, Schrag captures nature and its great forces through an investigation of the lasting impressions each of us retain through experience. He engages his viewer with subtle mark making as well as with the bold calligraphic strokes so often associated with his work. His palette of almost Fauvist intensity adds dimension and passion to the landscapes he created.

Schrag's art career spanned more than 60 years and he had strong ties to the New York City art scene. After studying at the Art Students League, he joined S.W. Hayter's prestigious printmaking studio Atelier 17, working alongside artists Miró, Chagall and Jackson Pollock. Schrag was named director of the Atelier in 1950 and later began a long teaching career at Cooper Union, where he taught drawing and graphic arts from 1954-1968. Schrag had a direct impact on many of his students, including the Syracuse University-based artist Jerome Witkin. A student of Schrag at Cooper Union and a well-established contemporary artist, Witkin has commented on Schrags masterful handling of the landscape, and the evocative power of his vision.

The art selected for this exhibit will convey the artist's ability to see the landscape as if for the first time, the surprise of that special view, the recognition of his ability to feel wonder when looking at nature or figures, and the reward associated with seeing the world through his eyes.


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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, October 11



TONY: 2012
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

The Other New York: 2012 (Tony: 2012) is an ambitious project that aims to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties. The project offers diverse arts venues and outdoor public spaces for contemporary creative expression on a scale not before seen in Syracuse. In addition, TONY: 2012 demonstrates the power of artistic partnerships to boost public awareness of the arts by presenting opportunities for the community to connect with exhibitions, programs, and events offered simultaneously throughout the city.

The artists included in the SUArt Galleries TONY: 2012 are Tammy Brackett, Juan Cruz, Sara Di Donato, Matthew Glaysher, Amy Greenan, Sue Huggins Leopard, Barbara Page, James Skvarch.

The SUArt Galleries is one of 14 venues participating in this citywide celebration of the visual arts. Please take the time to visit the exhibitions at the other TONY venues to see the wealth of talent that resides and works upstate.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, October 11



Prophecy: Peter B. Jones
Everson Museum of Art

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

"Prophecy" is a timely exhibition pertaining to Indigenous prophecies. By incorporating themes of ecology, creation, demise and the future according to the Mayan calendar, traditional Iroquois teachings and other cultural beliefs, Jones provides a visual representation of the foretold truths.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, October 11



The Other New York: 2012
Everson Museum of Art

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

The Other New York: 2012 is a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaboration among 12 art organizations in Syracuse. This ambitious project aims to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties. The project will offer diverse arts venues and outdoor public spaces for contemporary creative expression on a scale not before seen in Syracuse. In addition, TONY: 2012 demonstrates the power of artistic partnerships to boost public awareness of the arts by presenting opportunities for the community to connect with exhibitions, programs, and events offered simultaneously throughout the city.

TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with ArtRage-The Norton Putter Gallery, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Onondaga Historical Association, Punto de Contacto/Point of Contact, Red House Arts Center, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, City of Syracuse and XL Projects.

Alternative art spaces in the form of freight containers will provide temporary exhibition/installation sites. The containers will be strategically located in the city to link arts venues and encourage visitors to walk and experience art along the way.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, October 11



Puerto Rican Bomba and Plena: A Graphic History
La Casita Cultural Center

Price: Free
La Casita Cultural Center
109 Otisco St., Syracuse

The exhibit presents the works of nine Puerto Rican master artists who were commissioned to create screen prints to capture the spirit of the annual Bomba and Plena Festivals held in Puerto Rico. Their posters have been collected and preserved by the Institute of Puerto Rican Culture in San Juan.

Featured artists are José R. Alicea, Luis Alonso, Luis Germán Cajigas, Jesús Cardona, Sixto Cotto, David Goitia, Samuel Lind, Luis Maisonet Ramos, and Nelson Sambolin.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, October 11



Lov U
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

"Lov U" is a multimedia installation by Senga Nengudi.

Colorado-based Senga Nengudi is a key figure of the Black Arts Movement in the 1970s and 1980s. Known primarily for performance-based art installations, her work focuses on movement and the human body, is multidisciplinary in nature and international in scope, with cultural references to Africa, the African Diaspora, and Asia. For her multimedia, performance-based exhibition "Lov U," Nengudi explores the physical senses of being human, and includes photographs and video to reflect on the essence of love. Drawn to discarded, everyday materials, the ephemerality of Nengudi's work is a metaphor for life's transience.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, October 11



The Other New York (TONY): 2012
XL Projects

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

XL Projects will present the work of seven artists selected for "The Other New York (TONY): 2012," a communitywide, multi-venue contemporary art exhibition featuring artists currently living in New York State outside of the New York City metropolitan area.

The artists showing work at XL Projects -- Michael Barletta, Daniel Buckingham, Jay Carrier, Meredith Davenport, Kara Daving, Tom DeLooza, and Fernando Orellana -- are among the 63 artists selected from 235 submissions for TONY: 2012. The work that will be on view at XL includes large sculpture, video, photography, kinetic sculpture, large-scale painting, and a large window graphic across the front of the venue.

TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with 14 art institutions and cultural organizations in Syracuse: ArtRage, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Onondaga Historical Association, Point of Contact, Rosamond Gifford Zoo, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, City of Syracuse, and XL Projects.

For more information, contact Andrew Havenhand at ahavenhand@yahoo.com. XL Projects may be contacted at 315-442-2542 during gallery hours. For more information about TONY: 2012 and the other exhibiting artists and venues, visit everson.org.


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1:00 PM - 6:00 PM, October 11



life. love. time travel.
Echo

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

Group show of works by over 20 artists.


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2:00 PM - 7:00 PM, October 11



TONY: 2012 (The Other New York)
ArtRage Gallery

Price: Free
ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave., Syracuse

The Everson Biennial, titled "The Other New York: 2012," is being exhibited in community art galleries across Syracuse this year. ArtRage is honored to participate by exhibiting the work of four artists chosen in collaboration with the Everson Museum.

Ben Altman, Neil Chowdhury, Bob Gates and Paul Pearce, the four photographers whose works comprise this exhibit, present work that, while distinctive, shares a key characteristic. All are documentary photographers who are a bit wary of being seen as truth tellers. Fully understanding that the "objective photograph" is a myth, their photographic work -- both in the process of its creation and the images presented -- casts into doubt our traditional notions of documentation, objectivity and veracity. Nonetheless, each photographer is visualizing a certain truth, which may be one we do not know, or one that we prefer to avoid knowing. Participating in the artist's unflinching gaze, we become complicit witnesses to situations -- torture, poverty, social class, and the effects of war -- often conveniently rendered invisible.

Read a review!


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6:30 PM - 11:00 PM, October 11



TONY 2012: Karen Brummund
Urban Video Project

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

The Everson is I.M. Pei's first museum commission. His art museums are commonly seen as art objects for art objects. They are sculptures in the landscape. Shortly after the Everson, Pei built the Johnson Museum of Art in Ithaca. In this site-specific video installation, images of the form and materials of both art museums are projected onto the Everson Museum. The images capture the light, surfaces, and depth of the architecture. The video uses images from two different buildings, analyzing how Pei's ideas bridge individual communities. These disparate places are abstractly connected through the architect's development. The plaza is not only infused with the presence of the Pei's forms, but also the conversation that takes place through his practice.

This video by Karen Brummund is part of The Other New York: 2012, a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaboration among 14 art organizations in Syracuse. This ambitious project aims
to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York.

Video projection begins at dusk.


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Film
 

7:00 PM, October 11



SyrFilmFest '12 Opening Night
Syracuse International Film Festival
Featuring Karen Black

Price: $10 regular, $8 AARP members
Palace Theater
2384 James St., Syracuse

Emessa - Homs (World premiere, Malek Jandali)
The world premiere of Syrian pianist/composer Malek Jandali's new music video. Malek and the team at FUGO Studios set out to achieve an ambitious vision of freedom in the face of oppression. The video portrays a fantasy world in which a boy makes a journey to a clock tower to free children imprisoned there from the tyranny of an evil ruler.

Maria My Love (2011, Jasmine McGlade Chazelle, 99 minutes, fiction, USA)
A young woman named Ana is struggling to deal with her mother's death and her father's mistakes. In an effort to feel better, she reconnects with her half-sister Grace (Lauren Fales) and, inspired by a new boyfriend (Brian Rieger), sets out on a quest to find someone to help. Though excited and hopeful when she meets an eccentric woman named Maria (Karen Black), she soon discovers Maria is a compulsive hoarder, and is swept up in a situation more emotionally and morally complicated than she had expected to find. Inspired by a true story.

Come Back to the Five and Dime Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean (1982, Robert Altman, 109 minutes, fiction, USA)
Director Robert Altman directs this elegant cinematic adaptation of Ed Graczyk's Broadway play, which observes the interactions between a group of women holding a 20-year reunion of their James Dean fan club. Over the course of their get-together, the old friends expose painful secrets and stunning revelations, all of which are powerfully conveyed by a cast that includes Sandy Dennis, Karen Black, Kathy Bates, and in her comeback performance, Cher.

Karen Black, SIFF's SOPHIA Lifelong Achievement Award winner, will attend and discuss via Skype.


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7:00 PM, October 11



Animation Program
Syracuse International Film Festival

Price: $8 regular; $6 students/AARP members
Watson Theater, Menschel Media Center
316 Waverly Ave. (Syracuse University), Syracuse

The Revenge of a Kinematograph Cameraman (1912, Wladyslaw Starewicz, 12 minutes, Poland/Russia)
A jilted husband takes revenge by filming his wife and her lover and showing the result at the local cinema. This is one of Starewicz's first animations and stars animated beetles.

How a Mosquito Operates (1912, Winsor McCay, 6 minutes, USA)
A hungry mosquito spots and follows a man on his way home. The mosquito slips into the room where the man is sleeping, and gets ready for a meal. His first attempts startle the man and wake him up, but the mosquito is very persistent.

Trip (Pytuvane) (Radostina Neykova, 8 minutes, Bulgaria)
A man and a woman are moving towards one another on a train. During the trip they meet and part with different people in different places and at different times until they finally find each other. Very inventive

Car Crash Opera (Skip Battaglia, 8 minutes, USA)
An all-singing short animated cartoon, constructed as an homage to that paragon of American cinematic art form staples -- the car crash film. But this is sung as an opera, with seven characters, graphic and musical flourishes, poignant interludes, orchestration, and sound effects. Strong and beautifully drawn.

The Thing in the Corner (Zoe Berriatua, 10 minutes, Spain)
A writer who can't write because there is a thing in the corner of his room. Is he crazy or is it real? He meets a drunk who can see it. He learns to live with it.

Twinkling (Oh Jimon, 7 minutes, Korea)
A man listens to his car radio. He's underwater. It's a toy car surrounded by monsters. He's in a glass globe. A large hand belongs to a sleeping girl. Girl is in car with him. She tells him they are through and he drowns in tears.

Paper Memories (Theo Putzu, 8 minutes, Spain)
An old man searches for happiness in old photos. His world is divided into multiple realities. The film combines live action with animation. Interesting combination of live action and animation

Sprite (Kliceni) (Martina Vybiralova, 5 minutes, Czech Republic)
Drawn animation. A girl is trapped in a birdcage kept by a wolf man. She escapes, sends a butterfly to him and teases him with the cage key. The key becomes a bird and flies to the girl. The wolf becomes a prince.

Eso Te Pasa Por Barroco (Pablo Serrano, 4 minutes, Spain)
Claymation in which a chicken gets to dine on a human. Very funny.

Ticket (Frenc Rofusy, 10 minutes, Hungary)
Rotoscoping is the primary technique used to explore the physical and psychological journey of a man, through life, from birth to death from his point of view. Powerful.

The Old Man and the Old Woman (Basia Goszczynska, 9 minutes, USA)
Two soul mates struggle with opposing fears of death and loneliness in this short dark comedy.

The Boy in the Bubble (Kealan O'Rourke, 8 minutes, Ireland)
Rupert, a ten year old boy falls hopelessly in love. When it all goes terribly wrong he wishes never again to experience heartache. Turning to a book of magic he invokes a spell to forever shield him from emotion.

City (Kim Ye-Young and Kim Young-geun, 5 minutes, Korea)
Computer generated animation. Seoul is full of skyscrapers and asphalt amid pollution and noise. But what it is essentially is its people. Imagine the city without walls and roofs, free from its shell able to breathe and feel the warmth. Very creative.

Body Memory (Keha Malu) (Ulo Pikkov, 10 minutes, Estonia)
Our body remembers more than we expect and imagine. Our body remembers and bears the sorrow and pain of our ancestors. Powerful, inventive, a major award winner.


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Music
 

7:00 PM, October 11



Album Release Party: Tom Bronzetti
Pro Musica Divina

Price: $12 regular, $8 students/seniors
St. Matthew's School
214 Kinne St., East Syracuse

Pro Musica Divina is excited to announce the album release concert for Syracuse-based guitarist Tom Bronzetti, featuring Andrew Carrol on organ and Rick Montalbano on drums. The program is a mix of standards from American songbook greats like Gershwin, Rodgers and Hart, and Jule Styne as well as original new tunes from Tom.

"Bronzetti is an intelligent, patient and dedicated guitar player. 'Make Someone Happy' is the culmination of years of studying and playing gigs with some of the best musicians from Upstate New York and beyond. Playing with his best musical friends, Bronzetti explores his talents as far as they can go. Any jazz fan will hear the originality and quality of his guitar playing. It's a fantastic debut album from a guitarist who undoubtedly has much more to come in the future."
-- Gene Wexler, WOKV Jacksonville, FL

Join us in the Community Room at St. Matthew's and enjoy a world-class Jazz trio in our intimate setting.


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8:00 PM, October 11



Americana Groove Night
Featuring Big Mean Sound Machine, with hosts Noah and Andrew VanNorstrand

Price: $5
Funk 'n Waffles University
727 S. Crouse Ave. (Campus Plaza, behind Marshall , Syracuse


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Theater
 

6:45 PM, October 11



The Sound of Murder
Acme Mystery Company

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

High on a hill died a lonely goatherd and some people around the Abbey are beginning to get the idea that sweet little Maria just might be a budding serial killer. Is she now 16, going on 17? What exactly are her favorite things? Mother Abbess and her new assistant, Sister Adolph, are calling in all nuns and townsfolk to decide what to do. Even the pompous Captain Von Trumpp and his bratty children will be there. Don't be late. You don't want Sister Adolph shaking her carrot at you.


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7:30 PM, October 11



Jersey Boys
Broadway in Syracuse

Landmark Theatre
362 S. Salina St., Syracuse

"Too good to be true!" raves the New York Post for Jersey Boys, the 2006 Tony Award-winning Best Musical about Rock and Roll Hall of Famers The Four Seasons: Frankie Valli, Bob Gaudio, Tommy DeVito and Nick Massi. This is the story of how four blue-collar kids became one of the greatest successes in pop music history. They wrote their own songs, invented their own sounds and sold 175 million records worldwide -- all before they were 30! Jersey Boys, winner of the 2006 Grammy Award for Best Musical Show Album and most recently, the 2009 Olivier Award for Best New Musical, features their hit songs "Sherry," "Big Girls Don't Cry," "Rag Doll," "Oh What a Night" and "Can't Take My Eyes Off You."

Read a Review!


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7:30 PM, October 11



Moby Dick
Syracuse Stage
Peter Amster, director

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

Alive with a soundscape of 16 authentic sea shanties and performed by an ensemble of nine, this highly physical adaption cuts to the core of Melville's searing narrative and plays with the fury of a Nantucket sleigh ride. A young man seeks adventure on a whaling vessel and finds himself a pawn in an obsessive pursuit of vengeance that threatens death and destruction for all. Director Peter Amster returns to guide the ensemble in this thrilling and critically acclaimed telling of a classic American tale. Adapted for the stage by Julian Rad from the book by Herman Melville

Read a Review!


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8:00 PM, October 11



Assassins
Redhouse

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

This Sondheim musical explores the history of presidential assassination in America, from John Wilkes Booth to John Hinckley Jr. Assassins explores how society interprets the American Dream, marginalizes outsiders, and rewrites and sanitizes its collective history. A perfect evening of theatre that examines the state of contemporary politics during this election season. Music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim; book by John Weidman.

There will be a talkback session following each performance.

Read a Review!


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Friday, October 12, 2012


Art
 

12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, October 12



Windows Project: TONY 2012
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

For this project, Jeffrey Einhorn created a site-specific installation "A Portrait of the Artist as a Giant Deflating Head" to address the fine line between performance art and sculpture while emphasizing wittily the unstable state of things or a disorder of a system.

This Window Projects exhibition is part of The Other New York: 2012, a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with 14 Syracuse partner art organizations to highlight artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 12



Lynette Blake: Within and Beyond
Weeks Art Gallery at Baltimore Woods

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

Lynette Blake's oil paintings draw the viewer in through complex layers of shape and color. The use of overlapping imagery conveys a depth that extends deep below the surface of the canvas. Objects, whether used directly or evoked by abstract shapes, float in and out of light illuminating them with a pervasive warm glow. The effect is otherworldly -- a feeling of being outside time and space is conveyed.

Blake has exhibited her work throughout the Northeast, and is currently represented locally by the Szozda Gallery in Syracuse, as well as national venues. She studied art at Brown University in Rhode Island and currently resides in Upstate NY.

More information on the Weeks Gallery at Baltimore Woods can be found at www.baltimorewoods.org.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 12



Gallery Exhibit: Brendan Rose & Michael Barletta: Paper, Staple, String
Onondaga Community College

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

"Paper, Staple, String" is a spatial installation, transforming Onondaga's Gallery into a dynamic field of suspended objects. Educational remnants (the discarded paperwork of students) are reclaimed as monochromatic pixels of a space defining cloud. This three-dimensional form transfigures as it intersects with the gallery walls, flattening and expanding against the two-dimensional surface.


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9:00 AM - 2:00 PM, October 12



TONY: 2012: Ink Geographies
Point of Contact Gallery

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

Feels like writing, but the artist is quick to make clear that it is not. Signs, representations ... of what? A mental process, a journey, from diverse points of origin through our individual timelines, our personal twists and turns. As a script emerges, something is set free, though it leaves a mark, an imprint. The artist's essential playground is a space to explore geometric archetypes that can only be found inside one another; all are one. A sacred mandala? Images contract and expand and there is order, not chaos. No more chaotic than life emerging from the womb, contraction, expansion; a beating heart, where life is felt, contraction, expansion...an ever-expanding universe, contracts only to further expand. We don't know how to will it into action. A similar experience with ink takes form in this experiment by Oscar Garcés. It flows from a playful doodle, "el virus," he calls it. And before you know it, connects with something else, an altered state of consciousness. Everything else disappears as it takes over.

The Point of Contact Gallery presents the first solo show by Cuban-born, Syracuse-based artist Oscar Garcés, as part of The Other New York: TONY 2012, a community-wide biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaboration among 14 venues in Syracuse. This program also commemorates the celebration of Hispanic Heritage Month at Point of Contact.

Born in Santiago, Cuba in 1987, Garcés came to the United States in 2000. During his years residing first in Florida, when he began to develop as a visual artist, Garcés received multiple recognitions, including a Golden Key Award for best portfolio by Scholastics. Later in Syracuse, Garcés won a "Best of Show" Award at the Community Folk Art Center in 2005. He has also shown his paintings at the Warehouse Gallery's Window Project and at La Casita Cultural Center Gallery.

TONY 2012: "The Other New York" seeks to highlight the work and talent of different rising artists from the Central New York area.


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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 12



Phonography
Syracuse Technology Garden Gallery

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

Cell phone photography, featuring works of 75 Central New York and international artists. Amazing, imaginative, creative, innovative, fun photos you'll love!


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 12



Assembly-line Architecture: Repetition and Innovation in the Work of Marcel Breuer
Syracuse University Library Special Collections Research Center

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

The exhibit, curated by Teresa Harris, architectural historian and project coordinator for the Marcel Breuer Digital Archive, showcases original drawings, photographs and documents from Breuer's long career.

Like many modern architects, Marcel Breuer found inspiration in the repetition characteristic of industrial processes, often relying on modular units or a standard kit of parts to create his buildings and interiors. The limits imposed by these systems stimulated subtle formal and spatial innovation so that no two designs were exactly alike, despite common components.


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 12



Investigations
Syracuse University School of Architecture

Price: Free
Slocum Hall Gallery
Syracuse University campus, Syracuse

An exhibition of the work and design process of Stephan Jaklitsch and Mark Gardner through sketches, models, renderings, construction drawings, and photographs of six projects. Their work addresses specific conditions of site, use, the psychology of experience, sustainability, techniques of construction craft in detail, and materiality of building.

Jaklitsch/Gardner Architects (J/GA) is an award-winning NYC-based design practice that focuses on urban scale projects, buildings, interiors, and objects. Award-winning projects include the Marc Jacobs Tokyo Flagship Building (2010); a bike rack for the NYC Dept. of Transportation that was exhibited at the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum (2008); and the Marc Jacobs International Showroom (2012).


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 12



The dB Cultural Revolution series by Decibel
Westcott Community Art Gallery

Price: Free
Westcott Community Center
Corner of Euclid Ave. and Westcott St., Syracuse

Propaganda images generated during the Cultural Revolution in China have been remixed to create commentary on the modern Cultural Revolution society is undergoing in the form of music, art, and media. Elements of the old and new are mixed together to evolve into something new.


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9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, October 12



Play on Light
Edgewood Gallery

Price: Free
Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd., Syracuse

Adriana Meiss: Pastel landscapes
John Franklin: Turned wood and sculptural vessels
Paul Riccardi: Pastel florals and still-lifes
Judy McCumber: Silver and gemstone jewelry


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 12



TONY: 2012 (The Other New York)
Community Folk Art Center

Price: Free
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

The Other New York: 2012 is a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaboration among 12 art organizations in Syracuse. This ambitious project aims to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties. The project will offer diverse arts venues and outdoor public spaces for contemporary creative expression on a scale not before seen in Syracuse. In addition, TONY: 2012 demonstrates the power of artistic partnerships to boost public awareness of the arts by presenting opportunities for the community to connect with exhibitions, programs, and events offered simultaneously throughout the city.

TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with ArtRage, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Punto de Contacto/Point of Contact, Red House Arts Center, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, and the City of Syracuse. Alternative art spaces in the form of freight containers will provide temporary exhibition/installation sites. The containers will be strategically located in the city to link arts venues and encourage visitors to walk and experience art along the way.

Community Folk Art Center TONY 2012 featured artists are Elizabeth Leader, Michael Moody, Abisay Puentes, Sandra Stephens, who each use their art to engage in a larger conversation about significant but often overlooked social issues, including racial identity and urban decay.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 12



TONY: 2012: Variography
Erie Canal Museum

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

This exhibit features Buffalo artist Michael Bosworth's "Variography" -- a pair of installations, one inside the historic Syracuse Weighlock Building and the other outside and directly across the former Erie Canal (now Erie Blvd.) from the Weighlock. Inside there will be four-foot tall brick columns containing magic-lantern projectors, while outside will stand a camera obscurae built of cement on heavy wooden tripods.

Michael Bosworth is a nationally exhibiting artist and a professor in the photography department of Villa Maria College. He received his M.F.A. from the University of New Mexico, a B.F.A. and B.A. at UB. His commissioned public art projects include Fluid Culture, Main Street/Art Street, and Herd About Buffalo.

The Erie Canal Museum is proud to be a part of The Other New York: 2012 (TONY: 2012), an unprecedented community-wide, multi-venue contemporary art exhibition. TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with ArtRage, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Onondaga Historical Association, Point of Contact, Rosamond Gifford Zoo, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, City of Syracuse and XL Projects.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 12



Drama From the Garden: New Work by Terry Askey-Cole
Gallery 54

Gallery 54
54 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

Terry Askey-Cole brings her love of nature and the outdoors to all her new pieces inspired by her beautiful gardens.


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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, October 12



Carl Hoffner Exhibition
Imagine

Imagine
38 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

An exhibition of limited-edition color lithographs and digital paintings by Fayetteville artist Carl Hoffner.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 12



Susan Worsham: Bittersweet/Bloodwork
Light Work Gallery

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

When Susan Worsham was just 18, her brother took his own life after severing his spinal cord in a motorcycle accident. As a young girl she had already lost her father to a heart attack, and finally in 2004, she lost her mother as well. In the words of Worsham, "Shortly after my mother passed I came across a set of antique veterinary slides. They were some of the most interesting things that I had ever seen. I framed ninety of them in a long wooden frame resembling the shape of the slide itself. It was the first piece of art that I made after my mother died. I called the piece a watercolor because of the collection of pastel colors, but it was also a sort of poem when you got close and read the titles ... Rabbit's Lung, Fowl's Spleen, and even Human Umbilical Cord. They seemed to hold beauty and death at the same time."

Worsham went on to photograph her old childhood home as well as her oldest neighbor, Margaret Daniel. Margaret is one of the last remaining threads from Worsham's childhood and was the last person to see her brother alive. She made him her homemade bread, and he finished the whole loaf before he shot himself. The story came full circle one day when Margaret brought out her dissection kit and microscope slides. She had been a biology teacher and was holding on to the same sort of slides that fascinated Worsham. Margaret's microscope and slides have since become a metaphor for Worsham's desire to look deeper into the landscape of her childhood--from the flora and fauna to the feelings, Margaret calls it "blood work."

In addition to Worsham's touching photographs made in and around Virginia, this exhibition features a selection of Margaret's dissection tools alongside her microscope, as well as audio recordings of their various conversations about plants, life, and death. All together, the photographs and accompaniments in Bittersweet/Bloodwork speak of the poetry of childhood, nature, discovery, love, and loss.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 12



TONY: 2012
Light Work Gallery

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

Light Work is pleased to announce the exhibition "The Other New York: 2012," featuring the photographic work of Sarah Averill, Bang-Geul Han, Mark McLoughlin, Jan Nagle, and Matthew Walker. This exhibition is part of a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaborion among 14 art organizations in Syracuse. This ambitious project aims to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 12



Syracuse Cultural Workers 100 @ 30
Onondaga Historical Association

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

100 posters celebrating 30 years. Since 1982, SCW has published and distributed over 700 posters across North America and a bit on other continents. This selection of 100 titles represents the best, the boldest, and the oldest.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 12



Take No Prisoners: Political Cartoons Over Time and Place
Onondaga Historical Association

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

Three well-known Central New York political cartoonists, Joe Glisson, Tim Atseff, and Frank Cammuso, are the featured cartoonists for an exhibition entitled "Take No Prisoners: Political Cartoons Over Time and Place." With insightful humor, these artists and their historic predecessors produced a wide variety of editorial cartoons that illustrated important issues of their time. Starting with cartoons from the Civil War era through the present day, "Take No Prisoners" is an opportunity to experience historic subjects as the current events they once were, and to see how election issues of the past compare with those of the present-day.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 12



Sight Unseen: Stereographs from the OHA Collection, 1850-1930
Onondaga Historical Association

Onondaga Historical Association
321 Montgomery St., Syracuse

Since OHA's inception, it has amassed a collection of over 2,000 stereographs, or stereo views, of Onondaga County and beyond. Archived in the research holdings, these 3-D photographs have never before been exhibited. Guest curator Colleen Woolpert offers an overview of the collection, providing insight into the little known history of stereo photography while taking us back into the past with the aid of exhibition stereoscopes. The exhibit includes Syracuse views taken by local photographers as well as nationally-marketed views, historic stereoscopes, books, and related 3-D ephemera. It also looks at the combined industries of photography, publishing, manufacturing and marketing that contributed to the enormous popularity of the stereograph.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, October 12



TONY: 2012: "Manifest Destiny and the American West" and "Last House"
Onondaga Historical Association

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

These exhibits are mounted as part of the The Other New York (TONY): 2012, Syracuse's art biennial. OHA's TONY: 2012 exhibits are artistically presented interpretations of dynamic social trends that are part of the historic legacy of Central New York.

In a three-dimensional display employing nearly 1,000 images set in glass jars, "Manifest Destiny and the American West," an exhibit by Buffalo artist Robert Hirsch, asks the visitor to think about how our nation's geographic progression across the continent has shaped American culture. The desire to exploit the salt brine reserves on Onondaga Lake contributed to a westward migration of settlers across Central New York in the post-American Revolution era, while the construction of the Erie Canal enhanced this movement through the 19th century and enabled many travelers to reach lands in the farther reaches of the American continent.

"Last House" is a multi-channel video installation by media artist Carl Lee that explores the aesthetics and means of a house demolition in Buffalo. Cities like Buffalo and Syracuse are faced with a large number of abandoned houses. This video asks us to think about what we gain and lose in demolishing them. This installation will be accompanied by three paintings by Western New York artist Amy Greenan of vacant houses in Syracuse awaiting an uncertain future, including "Not Here, Not Now," her interpretation of 711 Tully Street, which seems poised to have a different fate on Syracuse's Near West Side than that if the house in Last House.

Onondaga Historical Association is proud to be one of 14 Central New York venues for TONY: 2012. TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with ArtRage, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Onondaga Historical Association, Point of Contact, Rosamond Gifford Zoo, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, City of Syracuse, and XL Projects.


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10:00 AM - 10:00 PM, October 12



Faces, Forms and Illusions: Works by Scott Hutchison
Redhouse

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

Scott Hutchison is a painter living in the Washington DC metro area. His work combines contemporary realism and animation. An exploration of the human figure continues to be the leitmotiv of Hutchison's work with a long-standing interest in self portraiture.

Hutchison says:
"My animations combine traditional painting and drawing techniques with digital technology to create animated portraits, which are displayed on small LCD panels, or projected, large-scale. Dozens of individual stills portray my face, changing only slightly from one image to the next. When the images are unified digitally, an animation is created. Each video is comprised of multiple painted or drawn self-portraits that, although similar, possess slight variations of color and treatment. When animated, the paint and mark move across the surface, resulting in a portrait that is in constant flux."


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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, October 12



Altered Environments: Works of Willson Cummer and Laura Wellner
Szozda Gallery

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

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

This show brings together two artists, Laura J. Wellner and Willson Cummer, who view environments in different ways but whose works compliment each other's.

Wellner always tries to create something 'extraordinary out of the ordinary elements of nature' in her mixed media paintings, thereby, one might say, seeing something that's not physically there. Fine art photographer Willson Cummer gives viewers another dimension to familiar landmarks by including man-made intrusions that 'explore humanity's place in the environment.'

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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, October 12



Framed Un Framed
601 Tully

601 Tully St.
Syracuse

An exhibition of artists with a dual practice, featuring Abby Carter, Samantha Harmon, Lori Hawke, Stephanie Koenig, Lynette K Stephenson, and Marion Wilson.



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11:00 AM - 6:00 PM, October 12



Harvest
Gandee Gallery

Gandee Gallery
7846 Main St., Fabius

A group exhibition of Central New York artists which explores the inherit beauty of food and farming. It is during this time of year that the fruits of a farmer's labor are most appreciated, and preparation for winter, a time of hibernation and dormancy in the natural world, commences. The artists in Harvest celebrate this annual transition. The show will include photography, painting, pastel, and ceramics. Participating artists include Lisa Barker, Bob Gates, Wendy Harris, Jeremy Randall, Lucie Wellner, and Jamie Young.


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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, October 12



Karl Schrag: Memories and Premonitions
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

The Syracuse University Art Galleries is celebrating the career and life of Karl Schrag, American painter and printmaker, who would have been 100 years old this year. "Karl Schrag: Memories and Premonitions" is the first major examination of the artist's work since his death in 1995. The exhibition includes 70 original works of art by the influential artist, including paintings, prints and drawings.

Syracuse University has had a long and rewarding association with Karl Schrag and his family. It began in 1962 with a gift of a gouache painting titled "Coast in Autumn." Later the relationship grew with the first of numerous exhibitions, more gifts of artwork, and occasional lectures to students in the University's School of Art. Some 50 years later, S.U.'s art collection is much richer because of the 250-plus Karl Schrag artworks we maintain, and the continued support of Schrag Family.

2012 is also the centenary year of Karl Schrag's birth and gives us an opportunity to reinvestigate the talent, imagination, and sensitivity Schrag brought to his landscapes, still-life paintings, and portraits. A master of color, light, composition, and draftsmanship, Schrag captures nature and its great forces through an investigation of the lasting impressions each of us retain through experience. He engages his viewer with subtle mark making as well as with the bold calligraphic strokes so often associated with his work. His palette of almost Fauvist intensity adds dimension and passion to the landscapes he created.

Schrag's art career spanned more than 60 years and he had strong ties to the New York City art scene. After studying at the Art Students League, he joined S.W. Hayter's prestigious printmaking studio Atelier 17, working alongside artists Miró, Chagall and Jackson Pollock. Schrag was named director of the Atelier in 1950 and later began a long teaching career at Cooper Union, where he taught drawing and graphic arts from 1954-1968. Schrag had a direct impact on many of his students, including the Syracuse University-based artist Jerome Witkin. A student of Schrag at Cooper Union and a well-established contemporary artist, Witkin has commented on Schrags masterful handling of the landscape, and the evocative power of his vision.

The art selected for this exhibit will convey the artist's ability to see the landscape as if for the first time, the surprise of that special view, the recognition of his ability to feel wonder when looking at nature or figures, and the reward associated with seeing the world through his eyes.


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11:00 AM - 4:30 PM, October 12



TONY: 2012
Syracuse University Art Museum

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

The Other New York: 2012 (Tony: 2012) is an ambitious project that aims to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties. The project offers diverse arts venues and outdoor public spaces for contemporary creative expression on a scale not before seen in Syracuse. In addition, TONY: 2012 demonstrates the power of artistic partnerships to boost public awareness of the arts by presenting opportunities for the community to connect with exhibitions, programs, and events offered simultaneously throughout the city.

The artists included in the SUArt Galleries TONY: 2012 are Tammy Brackett, Juan Cruz, Sara Di Donato, Matthew Glaysher, Amy Greenan, Sue Huggins Leopard, Barbara Page, James Skvarch.

The SUArt Galleries is one of 14 venues participating in this citywide celebration of the visual arts. Please take the time to visit the exhibitions at the other TONY venues to see the wealth of talent that resides and works upstate.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, October 12



Prophecy: Peter B. Jones
Everson Museum of Art

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

"Prophecy" is a timely exhibition pertaining to Indigenous prophecies. By incorporating themes of ecology, creation, demise and the future according to the Mayan calendar, traditional Iroquois teachings and other cultural beliefs, Jones provides a visual representation of the foretold truths.


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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, October 12



The Other New York: 2012
Everson Museum of Art

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

The Other New York: 2012 is a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaboration among 12 art organizations in Syracuse. This ambitious project aims to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York and the surrounding counties. The project will offer diverse arts venues and outdoor public spaces for contemporary creative expression on a scale not before seen in Syracuse. In addition, TONY: 2012 demonstrates the power of artistic partnerships to boost public awareness of the arts by presenting opportunities for the community to connect with exhibitions, programs, and events offered simultaneously throughout the city.

TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with ArtRage-The Norton Putter Gallery, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Onondaga Historical Association, Punto de Contacto/Point of Contact, Red House Arts Center, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, City of Syracuse and XL Projects.

Alternative art spaces in the form of freight containers will provide temporary exhibition/installation sites. The containers will be strategically located in the city to link arts venues and encourage visitors to walk and experience art along the way.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, October 12



Puerto Rican Bomba and Plena: A Graphic History
La Casita Cultural Center

Price: Free
La Casita Cultural Center
109 Otisco St., Syracuse

The exhibit presents the works of nine Puerto Rican master artists who were commissioned to create screen prints to capture the spirit of the annual Bomba and Plena Festivals held in Puerto Rico. Their posters have been collected and preserved by the Institute of Puerto Rican Culture in San Juan.

Featured artists are José R. Alicea, Luis Alonso, Luis Germán Cajigas, Jesús Cardona, Sixto Cotto, David Goitia, Samuel Lind, Luis Maisonet Ramos, and Nelson Sambolin.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, October 12



Lov U
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

"Lov U" is a multimedia installation by Senga Nengudi.

Colorado-based Senga Nengudi is a key figure of the Black Arts Movement in the 1970s and 1980s. Known primarily for performance-based art installations, her work focuses on movement and the human body, is multidisciplinary in nature and international in scope, with cultural references to Africa, the African Diaspora, and Asia. For her multimedia, performance-based exhibition "Lov U," Nengudi explores the physical senses of being human, and includes photographs and video to reflect on the essence of love. Drawn to discarded, everyday materials, the ephemerality of Nengudi's work is a metaphor for life's transience.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, October 12



The Other New York (TONY): 2012
XL Projects

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

XL Projects will present the work of seven artists selected for "The Other New York (TONY): 2012," a communitywide, multi-venue contemporary art exhibition featuring artists currently living in New York State outside of the New York City metropolitan area.

The artists showing work at XL Projects -- Michael Barletta, Daniel Buckingham, Jay Carrier, Meredith Davenport, Kara Daving, Tom DeLooza, and Fernando Orellana -- are among the 63 artists selected from 235 submissions for TONY: 2012. The work that will be on view at XL includes large sculpture, video, photography, kinetic sculpture, large-scale painting, and a large window graphic across the front of the venue.

TONY: 2012 is organized by the Everson Museum of Art in collaboration with 14 art institutions and cultural organizations in Syracuse: ArtRage, Community Folk Art Center, Erie Canal Museum, Light Work, Onondaga Historical Association, Point of Contact, Rosamond Gifford Zoo, Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, SUArt Galleries, Urban Video Project, The Warehouse Gallery, City of Syracuse, and XL Projects.

For more information, contact Andrew Havenhand at ahavenhand@yahoo.com. XL Projects may be contacted at 315-442-2542 during gallery hours. For more information about TONY: 2012 and the other exhibiting artists and venues, visit everson.org.


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



life. love. time travel.
Echo

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

Group show of works by over 20 artists.


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2:00 PM - 7:00 PM, October 12



TONY: 2012 (The Other New York)
ArtRage Gallery

Price: Free
ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave., Syracuse

The Everson Biennial, titled "The Other New York: 2012," is being exhibited in community art galleries across Syracuse this year. ArtRage is honored to participate by exhibiting the work of four artists chosen in collaboration with the Everson Museum.

Ben Altman, Neil Chowdhury, Bob Gates and Paul Pearce, the four photographers whose works comprise this exhibit, present work that, while distinctive, shares a key characteristic. All are documentary photographers who are a bit wary of being seen as truth tellers. Fully understanding that the "objective photograph" is a myth, their photographic work -- both in the process of its creation and the images presented -- casts into doubt our traditional notions of documentation, objectivity and veracity. Nonetheless, each photographer is visualizing a certain truth, which may be one we do not know, or one that we prefer to avoid knowing. Participating in the artist's unflinching gaze, we become complicit witnesses to situations -- torture, poverty, social class, and the effects of war -- often conveniently rendered invisible.

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6:30 PM - 11:00 PM, October 12



TONY 2012: Karen Brummund
Urban Video Project

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

The Everson is I.M. Pei's first museum commission. His art museums are commonly seen as art objects for art objects. They are sculptures in the landscape. Shortly after the Everson, Pei built the Johnson Museum of Art in Ithaca. In this site-specific video installation, images of the form and materials of both art museums are projected onto the Everson Museum. The images capture the light, surfaces, and depth of the architecture. The video uses images from two different buildings, analyzing how Pei's ideas bridge individual communities. These disparate places are abstractly connected through the architect's development. The plaza is not only infused with the presence of the Pei's forms, but also the conversation that takes place through his practice.

This video by Karen Brummund is part of The Other New York: 2012, a community-wide, multi-venue biennial exhibition that is the result of a major collaboration among 14 art organizations in Syracuse. This ambitious project aims
to highlight the rich talent of artists across Upstate New York, with a special focus on Central New York.

Video projection begins at dusk.


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Film
 

7:00 PM, October 12



Special Event: Silent Film Classic & Music: Gold Rush
Syracuse International Film Festival
Society for New Music

Price: $15 regular; $10 students/AARP members
Palace Theater
2384 James St., Syracuse

Gold Rush (1925, Charlie Chaplin, 95 minutes, fiction, USA)

Screened with an original score, commissioned by the Festival, by Italian composer Gian-Luca Baldi and performed by members of the Society For New Music. Mr. Baldi will be present for a Q&A after the performance.

The Tramp (Charlie Chaplin) travels to the Yukon to take part in the Klondike Gold Rush. Bad weather strands him in a remote cabin with a prospector who has found a large gold deposit and an escaped criminal, after which they part ways, with the prospector and the fugitive fighting over the prospector's claim, ending with the prospector receiving a blow to the head and the fugitive falling off a cliff to his death. The Tramp eventually finds himself in a gold rush town and takes a job looking after another prospector's cabin. He falls in love with a lonely saloon girl, Georgia, who he mistakenly thinks has fallen in love with him. He soon finds himself waylaid by the prospector he met earlier, who has developed amnesia and needs the Tramp to help him find his claim. When we next see them they are on a steamer, two wealthy men headed for home. By chance, Georgia is also on the steamer and she and The Tramp plan to marry


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7:00 PM, October 12



Homecoming, Hold on Your Hand
Syracuse International Film Festival

Price: $8 regular; $6 students/AARP members
Jazz Central
441 E. Washington St., Syracuse

Homecoming (Gursimran Sandhu, 26 minutes, fiction, USA/India)
When 12-year-old Nina Patel is nominated by her classmates to represent her seventh grade class at Homecoming, she's thrilled. However, Nina's Indian heritage comes with pride and restrictions, and her traditional parents refuse to let their daughter assimilate into such an American tradition. Beautifully made, powerful, and very well acted.

Hold on Your Hand (Huayu Xu, 90 minutes, fiction, China)
Syracuse University MFA alum returns with his second feature film. The story centers on a photographer trying to reconcile his urban popularity with his true desire for artistic freedom. Circumstances bring him to a small village in which he encounters the beauty of the Chinese landscape and the care of an innocent woman. A poetic, beautifully shot work that exits in both a mythic and mundane world.


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7:00 PM, October 12



The Heart of Money, Solo Piano, The Fastest Matthew in the World (Nejry Chejsi Matej Na Suete), Pavilion
Syracuse International Film Festival

Price: $8 regular; $6 students/AARP members
Hergenhan Auditorium, Newhouse 3
Syracuse University, Syracuse

The Heart of Money (1912, Louis Feuillade and Leonce Perret, 17 minutes, fiction, France)
An innkeeper's daughter is in love but her mother has already decided that she is going to be married to another man. This early use of split screen makes for an impressive viewing.

Solo Piano (Anthony Sherin, 5 minutes, experimental/fiction, USA)
A piano sitting on the sidewalk in New York is seen from an apartment window two or three floors up as still images show people playing it and otherwise interacting with it until finally a group of people break it apart.

The Fastest Matthew in the World (Nejry Chejsi Matej Na Suete) (Tomas Pavlicek, 21 minutes, fiction, Czech Republic)
A man is always in a hurry, forgets things, and gets lost driving to his own birthday party that his girlfriend has arranged at a restaurant. His adventure forces him to confront his childhood and his phobia. Funny and interestingly told.

Pavilion (Tim Sutton, 68 minutes, fiction, USA)
Syracuse's own Tim Sutton's highly acclaimed film is about Max, a young teenager who leaves his lakeside town to live with his father on the fringe of suburban Arizona. The film creates a deep and ethereal world, showing us an innocent way of life coming apart at the seams, constructing an indelible image of the enigma of youth. One of ten films selected for IFP's 2011 Narrative Lab and by the Film Society of Lincoln Center's 2011 Emerging Visions Workshop.


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9:30 PM, October 12



Room, The Maiden Danced to Death
Syracuse International Film Festival

Price: $8 regular; $6 students/AARP members
Jazz Central
441 E. Washington St., Syracuse

Room (Fernando Franco, 18 minutes, fiction, Spain)
Ana is on her computer, chatting. She smokes, drinks, strips to bra and panties. Guys on line go crazy. There is heavy breathing of a male voice but the sounds seem to contradict the image. Ana leaves her room. When she returns her death is watched on web cam. An interesting statement about on-line relationships.

The Maiden Danced to Death (Endre Hules, 100 minutes, fiction, Hungary)
Beautifully made, totally entertaining. Steve, a dancer-turned-empresario, returns from Canada to his native Hungary after 20 years. Though the Communist regime that expelled him is gone, his brother, Gyula, hasn't changed. He still works with the same dance company they started together, and is married to Steve's former sweetheart, Mari. The two men's rivalry is triggered instantly, but Mari challenges them to revive their last success together, a dance on the ballad "The Maiden Danced to Death." The film seamlessly combines dramatic scenes with dance and music, allowing the dance to reveal long-held secrets and emotions.


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9:45 PM, October 12



Stroke
Syracuse International Film Festival
Featuring Special guest Rob Nilsson

Price: $8 regular; $6 students/AARP members
Palace Theater
2384 James St., Syracuse

Stroke (2000, Rob Nilsson, 95 minutes, fiction, USA)
Phil Berkowitz is a 55-year-old North Beach poet and survivor of the days of wine and roses, who has a stroke. Helpless, he lies in his flea-bag hotel room in San Francisco's Tenderloin until he is found by Jonny, his neighbor, a 60-year-old Black man. Jonny barely survives working part-time janitorial in a seedy strip club and escort service run by St. Tre and Malafide, now operating under the name Modisco. Breaking hotel rules Jonny lets Phil stay in his room and tries to help him regain his speech. He also plays cupid, introducing Phil to Svetlana, Polish, 35, a waitress, ex-model and recovering alcoholic. She feels sorry for Phil but he mistakes kindness for affection. Ron Perlman appears in a cameo.

With special guest and Sophia Award winner Rob Nilsson.


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9:45 PM, October 12



Max and his Brother-in-Law, Il Settimo, Girl$
Syracuse International Film Festival

Price: $8 regular; $6 students/AARP members
Hergenhan Auditorium, Newhouse 3
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Max and his Brother-in-Law (1912, Max Linder, 8 minutes, fiction, France)
Max and his young bride attempt to enjoy an Alpine honeymoon despite the presence of her mother.

Il Settimo (Luska Khalapvan, 10 minutes, fiction, France/Armenia)
A woman gets off the Metro and is immediately chased by man in a chicken suit. She is going to a restaurant to meet a blind date, her cousin, but another fakes it's him. When the real cousin shows up he mistakes another woman for her. Very clever.

Girl$ (Kenneth Bi , 105 minutes, fiction, Hong Kong)
In this very controversial film four girls, tempted by the money that can be earned in prostitution, meet men on "paid dates" in Hong Kong and enjoy the rewards to the fullest. However, after awhile, each of them will learn that nothing comes without a price. A very stylish film that deals with a serious social problem under the veneer of sexual exploitation.


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11:59 PM, October 12



Brew and View Screening: Five Easy Pieces
Syracuse International Film Festival

Price: $8 regular; $6 students/AARP members
Palace Theater
2384 James St., Syracuse

Five Easy Pieces (1970, Bob Rafelson, 98 minutes, fiction, USA)
The film stars Jack Nicholson, with Karen Black, Susan Anspach, Ralph Waite, and Sally Struthers in supporting roles. The film tells the story of a surly oil rig worker, Bobby Dupea, whose blue-collar existence belies his privileged youth as a child prodigy. When word reaches Bobby that his father is dying, he goes home to see him, reluctantly bringing along his pregnant girlfriend, Rayette (Black), a dimwitted waitress. The film was selected to be preserved by the Library of Congress in the National Film Registry in 2000.


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Music
 

11:15 AM, October 12



Cello Recital and String Masterclass
Onondaga Community College
Featuring Elinor Frey, cello

Price: Free
Storer Auditorium
Onondaga Community College, Syracuse


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6:00 PM - 9:00 PM, October 12



Jazz@Sitrus
CNY Jazz Arts Foundation
Featuring Michael and Anjela Lynn

Price: Free
Sitrus on the Hill
Sheraton Syracuse University Hotel, Syracuse


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Poetry/Reading
 

7:00 PM, October 12



Poet Thom Ward and author Patrick Lawler
Downtown Writer's Center

Price: Free
YMCA
340 Montgomery St., Syracuse

Thom Ward is sole proprietor of Thom Ward's Poetry Editing Services. The author of six collections of poetry, his most recent book is Etctera's Mistress, published in 2011 by Accents Publishing. He lives in western New York with his girlfriend Jennifer and their cat Phantom.

Patrick Lawler is the author of four books of poems, most recently Underground (Many Mountains Moving Press, 2011). His newest book is a novel, Rescuers of Skydivers Search Among the Clouds (Fiction Collective 2, Fall 2012). His many honors include an NEA Fellowship and two New York Foundation for the Arts fellowships.


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Theater
 

7:00 PM, October 12



Impossibilitados: A Theatrical Performance Inspired by the Paintings of Abisay Puentes
Community Folk Art Center

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

As part of our TONY: 2012 exhibition programming, we are hosting an original performance by José Miguel Hernández Hurtado, inspired by the paintings of artist Abisay Puentes. The moving piece captures the deep and dark emotions portrayed in Puentes's work.

The performance, entitled Imposibilitados, is a captivating piece that incorporates music and contemporary dance. Puentes created the piece in collaboration with local actor José Miguel Hernández Hurtado.

At the core of Puentes' work are a series of perplexing questions: Why do humans hurt each other? What is the reason for man's evil? Why do men have bad nature? In his attempt to answer these questions, he immerses the viewer in a visceral experience that provoke dark emotions.

Imposibilitados is a two-part meditative performance featuring video, body movement and classical music. The performance chronicles the story of a man who refuses to acknowledge reality and despite his many attempts to find peace, he finds himself caught in a perpetual cycle of contradiction.


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8:00 PM, October 12



Jersey Boys
Broadway in Syracuse

Landmark Theatre
362 S. Salina St., Syracuse

"Too good to be true!" raves the New York Post for Jersey Boys, the 2006 Tony Award-winning Best Musical about Rock and Roll Hall of Famers The Four Seasons: Frankie Valli, Bob Gaudio, Tommy DeVito and Nick Massi. This is the story of how four blue-collar kids became one of the greatest successes in pop music history. They wrote their own songs, invented their own sounds and sold 175 million records worldwide -- all before they were 30! Jersey Boys, winner of the 2006 Grammy Award for Best Musical Show Album and most recently, the 2009 Olivier Award for Best New Musical, features their hit songs "Sherry," "Big Girls Don't Cry," "Rag Doll," "Oh What a Night" and "Can't Take My Eyes Off You."

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8:00 PM, October 12



Assassins
Redhouse

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

This Sondheim musical explores the history of presidential assassination in America, from John Wilkes Booth to John Hinckley Jr. Assassins explores how society interprets the American Dream, marginalizes outsiders, and rewrites and sanitizes its collective history. A perfect evening of theatre that examines the state of contemporary politics during this election season. Music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim; book by John Weidman.

There will be a talkback session following each performance.

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8:00 PM, October 12



Moby Dick
Syracuse Stage
Peter Amster, director

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

Alive with a soundscape of 16 authentic sea shanties and performed by an ensemble of nine, this highly physical adaption cuts to the core of Melville's searing narrative and plays with the fury of a Nantucket sleigh ride. A young man seeks adventure on a whaling vessel and finds himself a pawn in an obsessive pursuit of vengeance that threatens death and destruction for all. Director Peter Amster returns to guide the ensemble in this thrilling and critically acclaimed telling of a classic American tale. Adapted for the stage by Julian Rad from the book by Herman Melville

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