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Events for Sunday, September 9, 2012

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-5:00 PM Golden Harvest Festival

10:00 AM Second Annual JamFest Central New York Bluegrass Association

11:00 AM-5:00 PM The Tall and Short of It Gallery 54

11:00 AM-6:00 PM Fibers Expo: Wearable, Warm and Wonderful Imagine

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Timeless Imagery: Associated Artists of CNY's 85th Anniversary Exhibition Onondaga Historical Association

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

11:00 AM-4:30 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-6:00 PM Jewish Music and Cultural Festival

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

3:00 PM Remembering the Heroes: A Musical Tribute to the Victims of 9/11

4:00 PM-7:00 PM Bobby Green and A Cut Above, with Brownskin Southwest Showcase Sunday

Events for Monday, September 10, 2012

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: Claude Freeman, Woods and Water Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Wild New York: The Photography of Chris Murray Westcott Community Art Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM The Tall and Short of It Gallery 54

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Fibers Expo: Wearable, Warm and Wonderful 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

5:30 PM-7:30 PM Fresh ArtRage Gallery

Events for Tuesday, September 11, 2012

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: Claude Freeman, Woods and Water Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Wild New York: The Photography of Chris Murray Westcott Community Art Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM My Recovery Story Community Folk Art Center

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

10:00 AM-5:00 PM The Tall and Short of It Gallery 54

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Fibers Expo: Wearable, Warm and Wonderful 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

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

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

1:00 PM-6:00 PM Painting by Tricia Pucci Echo

6:30 PM Artist Lecture: Senga Nengudi Syracuse University School of Art and Design

Events for Wednesday, September 12, 2012

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: Claude Freeman, Woods and Water Onondaga Community College

9:00 AM-5:00 PM Wild New York: The Photography of Chris Murray Westcott Community Art Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM My Recovery Story Community Folk Art Center

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

10:00 AM-5:00 PM The Tall and Short of It Gallery 54

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Fibers Expo: Wearable, Warm and Wonderful 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-6:00 PM An American Vision: East Meets West Szozda 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

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

1:00 PM-6:00 PM Painting by Tricia Pucci Echo

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

5:30 PM Roger Fanning Raymond Carver Reading Series

Events for Thursday, September 13, 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: Claude Freeman, Woods and Water Onondaga Community College

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 Wild New York: The Photography of Chris Murray Westcott Community Art Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM My Recovery Story Community Folk Art Center

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

10:00 AM-5:00 PM The Tall and Short of It Gallery 54

10:00 AM-6:00 PM Fibers Expo: Wearable, Warm and Wonderful Imagine

10:00 AM-7:00 PM Susan Worsham: Bittersweet/Bloodwork Light Work Gallery

10:00 AM-7:00 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-6:00 PM An American Vision: East Meets West Szozda 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-6:00 PM The Other New York (TONY): 2012 XL Projects

1:00 PM-6:00 PM Painting by Tricia Pucci Echo

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

5:00 PM-5:00 PM Opening Lov U The Warehouse Gallery

7:15 PM-11:00 PM TONY 2012: Karen Brummund Urban Video Project

7:30 PM Gala Opening Night with Marion Meadows LeMoyne College

9:00 PM Movie Screening: Shut Up and Play the Hits Westcott Theater

Events for Friday, September 14, 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: Claude Freeman, Woods and Water Onondaga Community College

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 Wild New York: The Photography of Chris Murray Westcott Community Art Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM My Recovery Story Community Folk Art Center

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

10:00 AM-6:00 PM The Tall and Short of It Gallery 54

10:00 AM-8:00 PM Fibers Expo: Wearable, Warm and Wonderful 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-8:00 PM An American Vision: East Meets West Szozda Gallery

11:00 AM-11:00 PM Festa Italiana

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 New York State Baroque Ensemble Onondaga Community College

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 Painting by Tricia Pucci Echo

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

5:00 PM-7:00 PM Opening: TONY: 2012: Variography Erie Canal Museum

6:00 PM-8:00 PM Play on Light Edgewood Gallery

7:00 PM Feeling on the Outside: Ray Smith symposium kick-off Syracuse University College of Arts and Sciences

7:15 PM-11:00 PM TONY 2012: Karen Brummund Urban Video Project

7:30 PM La Vida Bona NYS Baroque

8:00 PM The Real Inspector Hound Appleseed Productions (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Barefoot in the Park Covey Theatre Company (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Tommy Emmanuel Guitar League

8:00 PM Cry for Peace: Voices from the Congo (world premiere) Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

9:00 PM The Devil Makes Three, with Brown Bird Westcott Theater

Events for Saturday, September 15, 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-6:00 PM The Tall and Short of It Gallery 54

10:00 AM-7:00 PM Fibers Expo: Wearable, Warm and Wonderful Imagine

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

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

11:00 AM-5:00 PM My Recovery Story Community Folk Art Center

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

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Painting by Tricia Pucci Echo

11:00 AM-11:00 PM Festa Italiana

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

12:30 PM The Three Little Princess Pigs Magic Circle Children's Theatre

7:15 PM-11:00 PM TONY 2012: Karen Brummund Urban Video Project

8:00 PM The Real Inspector Hound Appleseed Productions (Read a review!)

8:00 PM The Bicycle Thief ArtRage Gallery

8:00 PM Opening Gala Senior Cabaret Black Box Players

8:00 PM Barefoot in the Park Covey Theatre Company (Read a review!)

8:00 PM Redhouse Regulars: The Baby Boomers Redhouse

8:00 PM Cry for Peace: Voices from the Congo (world premiere) Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

Events for Sunday, September 16, 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 TONY: 2012 Light Work Gallery

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

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

11:00 AM-5:00 PM The Tall and Short of It Gallery 54

11:00 AM-6:00 PM Fibers Expo: Wearable, Warm and Wonderful Imagine

11:00 AM-7:00 PM Festa Italiana

11:00 AM-4:00 PM Take No Prisoners: Political Cartoons Over Time and Place 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-6:00 PM The Other New York (TONY): 2012 XL Projects

2:00 PM Cry for Peace: Voices from the Congo (world premiere) Syracuse Stage (Read a review!)

4:00 PM Kinshasa Symphony Cinema Syracuse

4:00 PM Syracuse Opera Resident Artists in Concert Syracuse Opera

Next week  >>>

Sunday, September 9, 2012


Art
 

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


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


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



The Tall and Short of It
Gallery 54

Gallery 54
54 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

The exhibit features pottery by Jim Burke and paintings by Lisa Noviasky. Jim Burke's pottery combines function and style which makes his pieces both useful and unique. Lisa Noviasky paints with colors that best reflect the essence and emotional connection to the scene she is capturing.


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11:00 AM - 6:00 PM, September 9



Fibers Expo: Wearable, Warm and Wonderful
Imagine

Imagine
38 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

To mark the expansion of its fibers collection, Imagine will present "Wearable, Warm and Wonderful," an exhibition of fiber art.

Works will be featured by:
* Luc Ends by Lucinda Snyder, of Rochester, who creates playful purses.
* Pandemonium Millinery, of Seattle, represented by its elegant faux fur hats and scarves.
* Miss Fitt Hats, of Durham, NC, which crafts hand-felted merino wool hats, scarves, mittens and other adornments.
* Maruca Design, of Boulder, CO, which designs and produces handbags, wallets and cosmetics cases, while embracing principles of the Arts & Crafts movement.
* Laurel Moranz, of Skaneateles, who creates rayon chenille scarves, shawls and snoods.
* Ginny Spina, of Jamesville, who designs scarves made from vintage kimono silk.


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, September 9



Timeless Imagery: Associated Artists of CNY's 85th Anniversary Exhibition
Onondaga Historical Association
Associated Artists of Central New York

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

Since 1927, Associated Artists has sought to bring together the best artists and their art for the benefit of the central New York community. The exhibit at OHA will showcase 85 years of juried arts competition winning entries from regional artists. "Timeless Imagery" is an opportunity to observe in one gallery the history of Central New York's changing art scene.


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, September 9



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, September 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, September 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 - 6:00 PM, September 9



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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Festival
 

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



Golden Harvest Festival

Price: $5 adults, $1 ages 6-17, free for ages 5 and under
Beaver Lake Nature Center
8477 E. Mud Lake Rd., Baldwinsville

Main Stage
10:00 am: Dan Duggan
10:45 am: Catskill Puppet Theater
11:30 am: Michael Crissan
12:30 pm: Wildlife Series
1:15 pm: Wild Critter Call
1:30 pm: Catskill Puppet Theater
2:15 pm: Los Blancos
3:15 pm: Wildlife Series
4:00 pm: Wild Critter Call
4:15 pm: Los Blancos

Gazebo
10:00 am: Restless
11:30 am: The Magic of Virgil
12:30 pm: Lake Effect Bluegrass
1:30 pm: Michael Crissan
2:30 pm: The Magic of Virgil
3:30 pm: Dan Duggan

Plus arts and crafts, face painting, petting zoo, hayrides, and more.


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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, September 9



Jewish Music and Cultural Festival

Price: Free
Jewish Community Center
5655 Thompson Rd., Dewitt

Main Stage
12:00 pm: Zetz!
1:00 pm: Farah
2:00 pm: Keyna Hora Klezmer
3:00 pm: Largest CNY Hora
3:00 pm: The Afro-Semitic Experience, with Special Guests, the Syracuse Chapter of the Gospel Workshop of America
5:00 pm: West of Odessa
5:45 pm: Jam Session

Family Auditorium:
12:00-1:00 pm: Jonathan Dinkin and Klezmercuse
1:15-1:45 pm: Cantor Francine Berg
2:00-2:45 pm: West of Odessa
3:30-4:15 pm: Zetz!

JCC Lounge
12:15-1:00 pm: Jayde Martin
1:30-2:15 pm: Jeff and Judy Stanton


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Music
 

10:00 AM, September 9



Second Annual JamFest
Central New York Bluegrass Association

Apple Valley Festival Grounds
Route 20, Lafayette

Jam sessions including Gospel music.

For more information, visit www.cnyba.com.


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3:00 PM, September 9



Remembering the Heroes: A Musical Tribute to the Victims of 9/11

Price: Free. Donations accepted to benefit the Food Bank of CNY
Andrews Memorial United Methodist Church
106 Church St., North Syracuse

An annual concert performed in memory of those whose lives were lost due to the tragic events of September 11, 2001.

This concert features light classical and popular music of reflection and inspiration, performed in a peaceful environment by several local musicians familiar to CNY audiences. This event is not meant to be a political statement or to rehash the events which occurred on that day, but simply to provide an opportunity to gather together to remember, reflect and celebrate in a positive way those who we lost through the power of live music.

Please go to www.facebook.com/RememberingTheHeroes for program and performer information and other updates.



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4:00 PM - 7:00 PM, September 9



Bobby Green and A Cut Above, with Brownskin
Southwest Showcase Sunday

Price: Free
Spirit of Jubilee Park
South Ave. (100 Block), Syracuse


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Monday, September 10, 2012


Art
 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, September 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, September 10



Gallery Exhibit: Claude Freeman, Woods and Water
Onondaga Community College

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

Artist Statement: "Through my drawings I am creating a personal image of reality. It is not a reproduction of nature buy my expression of my emotions, sensations, and feelings, how that unique place impresses me. A photographed image preserves a visual event, but a drawing can entail the experience of seeing, of understanding atmosphere and space. In my drawings I try, for a change, to see things in black and white. I believe it is the only way to explore a uniquely natural landscape. The black and white landscapes have an almost mystical charm that changes with the time of day and season."

Claude Freeman is a Professor Emeritus at SUNY ESF where he taught Landscape Architecture for over 40 years. He now teaches drawing at the Art Department at OCC. Over many years his drawings have been accepted at numerous juried Art Shows including those at the Gibson Gallery in Potsdam, NY, the Lake Placid Center of the Arts in Lake Placid, NY, the Kirkland Art Center in Clinton, NY, Shelburne Farm's Art Exhibition in Shelburne, VT, and the Delavan Art Gallery, in Syracuse. Mr. Freeman has received a variety of awards and recognition for his artwork.


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



Wild New York: The Photography of Chris Murray
Westcott Community Art Gallery

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


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



The Tall and Short of It
Gallery 54

Gallery 54
54 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

The exhibit features pottery by Jim Burke and paintings by Lisa Noviasky. Jim Burke's pottery combines function and style which makes his pieces both useful and unique. Lisa Noviasky paints with colors that best reflect the essence and emotional connection to the scene she is capturing.


Back to list
 

 

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



Fibers Expo: Wearable, Warm and Wonderful
Imagine

Imagine
38 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

To mark the expansion of its fibers collection, Imagine will present "Wearable, Warm and Wonderful," an exhibition of fiber art.

Works will be featured by:
* Luc Ends by Lucinda Snyder, of Rochester, who creates playful purses.
* Pandemonium Millinery, of Seattle, represented by its elegant faux fur hats and scarves.
* Miss Fitt Hats, of Durham, NC, which crafts hand-felted merino wool hats, scarves, mittens and other adornments.
* Maruca Design, of Boulder, CO, which designs and produces handbags, wallets and cosmetics cases, while embracing principles of the Arts & Crafts movement.
* Laurel Moranz, of Skaneateles, who creates rayon chenille scarves, shawls and snoods.
* Ginny Spina, of Jamesville, who designs scarves made from vintage kimono silk.


Back to list
 

 

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


Back to list
 

 

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


Back to list
 


Film
 

5:30 PM - 7:30 PM, September 10



Fresh
ArtRage Gallery

Price: Free
ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave., Syracuse

"Fresh" is more than a film; it is a reflection of a rising movement of people and communities who are re-inventing our food system. "Fresh" celebrates the food architects who offer a practical vision of a new food paradigm and consumer access to it. Encouraging individuals to take matters into their own hands, "Fresh" is a guide that empowers people to take an array of actions as energetic as planting urban gardens and creating warm composts from food waste, and as simple as buying locally-grown products and preserving seasonal produce to eat later in the year. (2009, 72 minutes, produced and directed by Ana Sofia Joanes)


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Tuesday, September 11, 2012


Art
 

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


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, September 11



Gallery Exhibit: Claude Freeman, Woods and Water
Onondaga Community College

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

Artist Statement: "Through my drawings I am creating a personal image of reality. It is not a reproduction of nature buy my expression of my emotions, sensations, and feelings, how that unique place impresses me. A photographed image preserves a visual event, but a drawing can entail the experience of seeing, of understanding atmosphere and space. In my drawings I try, for a change, to see things in black and white. I believe it is the only way to explore a uniquely natural landscape. The black and white landscapes have an almost mystical charm that changes with the time of day and season."

Claude Freeman is a Professor Emeritus at SUNY ESF where he taught Landscape Architecture for over 40 years. He now teaches drawing at the Art Department at OCC. Over many years his drawings have been accepted at numerous juried Art Shows including those at the Gibson Gallery in Potsdam, NY, the Lake Placid Center of the Arts in Lake Placid, NY, the Kirkland Art Center in Clinton, NY, Shelburne Farm's Art Exhibition in Shelburne, VT, and the Delavan Art Gallery, in Syracuse. Mr. Freeman has received a variety of awards and recognition for his artwork.


Back to list
 

 

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



Wild New York: The Photography of Chris Murray
Westcott Community Art Gallery

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


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 11



My Recovery Story
Community Folk Art Center

Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

A month-long exhibition sponsored by Syracuse Behavioral Healthcare, "My Recovery Story" features a collection of photographs taken by community members. The photographs chronicle their recovery from substance abuse addictions. For more information about the center and their exhibition click here.


Back to list
 

 

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


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 11



The Tall and Short of It
Gallery 54

Gallery 54
54 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

The exhibit features pottery by Jim Burke and paintings by Lisa Noviasky. Jim Burke's pottery combines function and style which makes his pieces both useful and unique. Lisa Noviasky paints with colors that best reflect the essence and emotional connection to the scene she is capturing.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, September 11



Fibers Expo: Wearable, Warm and Wonderful
Imagine

Imagine
38 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

To mark the expansion of its fibers collection, Imagine will present "Wearable, Warm and Wonderful," an exhibition of fiber art.

Works will be featured by:
* Luc Ends by Lucinda Snyder, of Rochester, who creates playful purses.
* Pandemonium Millinery, of Seattle, represented by its elegant faux fur hats and scarves.
* Miss Fitt Hats, of Durham, NC, which crafts hand-felted merino wool hats, scarves, mittens and other adornments.
* Maruca Design, of Boulder, CO, which designs and produces handbags, wallets and cosmetics cases, while embracing principles of the Arts & Crafts movement.
* Laurel Moranz, of Skaneateles, who creates rayon chenille scarves, shawls and snoods.
* Ginny Spina, of Jamesville, who designs scarves made from vintage kimono silk.


Back to list
 

 

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


Back to list
 

 

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


Back to list
 

 

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


Back to list
 

 

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


Back to list
 

 

1:00 PM - 6:00 PM, September 11



Painting by Tricia Pucci
Echo

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

The first show of Tricia Pucci, an emerging artist based in Philadelphia where she is currently working on her degree in Interior Design at the Moore School of Art and Design.


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Lecture
 

6:30 PM, September 11



Artist Lecture: Senga Nengudi
Syracuse University School of Art and Design

Shemin Auditorium, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Lecture by Senga Nengudi, in conjunction with the Warehouse exhibit "Lov U," opening Thurs., Sept. 13.


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Wednesday, September 12, 2012


Art
 

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


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, September 12



Gallery Exhibit: Claude Freeman, Woods and Water
Onondaga Community College

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

Artist Statement: "Through my drawings I am creating a personal image of reality. It is not a reproduction of nature buy my expression of my emotions, sensations, and feelings, how that unique place impresses me. A photographed image preserves a visual event, but a drawing can entail the experience of seeing, of understanding atmosphere and space. In my drawings I try, for a change, to see things in black and white. I believe it is the only way to explore a uniquely natural landscape. The black and white landscapes have an almost mystical charm that changes with the time of day and season."

Claude Freeman is a Professor Emeritus at SUNY ESF where he taught Landscape Architecture for over 40 years. He now teaches drawing at the Art Department at OCC. Over many years his drawings have been accepted at numerous juried Art Shows including those at the Gibson Gallery in Potsdam, NY, the Lake Placid Center of the Arts in Lake Placid, NY, the Kirkland Art Center in Clinton, NY, Shelburne Farm's Art Exhibition in Shelburne, VT, and the Delavan Art Gallery, in Syracuse. Mr. Freeman has received a variety of awards and recognition for his artwork.


Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 12



Wild New York: The Photography of Chris Murray
Westcott Community Art Gallery

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


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 12



My Recovery Story
Community Folk Art Center

Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

A month-long exhibition sponsored by Syracuse Behavioral Healthcare, "My Recovery Story" features a collection of photographs taken by community members. The photographs chronicle their recovery from substance abuse addictions. For more information about the center and their exhibition click here.


Back to list
 

 

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


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 12



The Tall and Short of It
Gallery 54

Gallery 54
54 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

The exhibit features pottery by Jim Burke and paintings by Lisa Noviasky. Jim Burke's pottery combines function and style which makes his pieces both useful and unique. Lisa Noviasky paints with colors that best reflect the essence and emotional connection to the scene she is capturing.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, September 12



Fibers Expo: Wearable, Warm and Wonderful
Imagine

Imagine
38 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

To mark the expansion of its fibers collection, Imagine will present "Wearable, Warm and Wonderful," an exhibition of fiber art.

Works will be featured by:
* Luc Ends by Lucinda Snyder, of Rochester, who creates playful purses.
* Pandemonium Millinery, of Seattle, represented by its elegant faux fur hats and scarves.
* Miss Fitt Hats, of Durham, NC, which crafts hand-felted merino wool hats, scarves, mittens and other adornments.
* Maruca Design, of Boulder, CO, which designs and produces handbags, wallets and cosmetics cases, while embracing principles of the Arts & Crafts movement.
* Laurel Moranz, of Skaneateles, who creates rayon chenille scarves, shawls and snoods.
* Ginny Spina, of Jamesville, who designs scarves made from vintage kimono silk.


Back to list
 

 

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


Back to list
 

 

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


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, September 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 - 6:00 PM, September 12



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 - 4:30 PM, September 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.


Back to list
 

 

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


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, September 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, September 12



Painting by Tricia Pucci
Echo

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

The first show of Tricia Pucci, an emerging artist based in Philadelphia where she is currently working on her degree in Interior Design at the Moore School of Art and Design.


Back to list
 

 

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

Read a review!


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Poetry/Reading
 

5:30 PM, September 12



Roger Fanning
Raymond Carver Reading Series

Price: Free
Gifford Auditorium, Huntington Beard Crouse Hall
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Roger Fanning, a Whiting Writers' Award winner, will open the Fall 2012 Raymond Carver Reading Series. Fanning will read from his latest work, The Middle Ages (2012). 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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Thursday, September 13, 2012


Art
 

12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, September 13



Windows Project: TONY 2012
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

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

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, September 13



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, September 13



Gallery Exhibit: Claude Freeman, Woods and Water
Onondaga Community College

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

Artist Statement: "Through my drawings I am creating a personal image of reality. It is not a reproduction of nature buy my expression of my emotions, sensations, and feelings, how that unique place impresses me. A photographed image preserves a visual event, but a drawing can entail the experience of seeing, of understanding atmosphere and space. In my drawings I try, for a change, to see things in black and white. I believe it is the only way to explore a uniquely natural landscape. The black and white landscapes have an almost mystical charm that changes with the time of day and season."

Claude Freeman is a Professor Emeritus at SUNY ESF where he taught Landscape Architecture for over 40 years. He now teaches drawing at the Art Department at OCC. Over many years his drawings have been accepted at numerous juried Art Shows including those at the Gibson Gallery in Potsdam, NY, the Lake Placid Center of the Arts in Lake Placid, NY, the Kirkland Art Center in Clinton, NY, Shelburne Farm's Art Exhibition in Shelburne, VT, and the Delavan Art Gallery, in Syracuse. Mr. Freeman has received a variety of awards and recognition for his artwork.


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9:00 AM - 7:00 PM, September 13



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, September 13



Wild New York: The Photography of Chris Murray
Westcott Community Art Gallery

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


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 13



My Recovery Story
Community Folk Art Center

Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

A month-long exhibition sponsored by Syracuse Behavioral Healthcare, "My Recovery Story" features a collection of photographs taken by community members. The photographs chronicle their recovery from substance abuse addictions. For more information about the center and their exhibition click here.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 13



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, September 13



The Tall and Short of It
Gallery 54

Gallery 54
54 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

The exhibit features pottery by Jim Burke and paintings by Lisa Noviasky. Jim Burke's pottery combines function and style which makes his pieces both useful and unique. Lisa Noviasky paints with colors that best reflect the essence and emotional connection to the scene she is capturing.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, September 13



Fibers Expo: Wearable, Warm and Wonderful
Imagine

Imagine
38 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

To mark the expansion of its fibers collection, Imagine will present "Wearable, Warm and Wonderful," an exhibition of fiber art.

Works will be featured by:
* Luc Ends by Lucinda Snyder, of Rochester, who creates playful purses.
* Pandemonium Millinery, of Seattle, represented by its elegant faux fur hats and scarves.
* Miss Fitt Hats, of Durham, NC, which crafts hand-felted merino wool hats, scarves, mittens and other adornments.
* Maruca Design, of Boulder, CO, which designs and produces handbags, wallets and cosmetics cases, while embracing principles of the Arts & Crafts movement.
* Laurel Moranz, of Skaneateles, who creates rayon chenille scarves, shawls and snoods.
* Ginny Spina, of Jamesville, who designs scarves made from vintage kimono silk.


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10:00 AM - 7:00 PM, September 13



Susan Worsham: Bittersweet/Bloodwork
Light Work Gallery

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

There will be a gallery reception this evening 5:00-7:00 pm.

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 - 7:00 PM, September 13



TONY: 2012
Light Work Gallery

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

There will be a gallery reception this evening 5:00-7:00 pm.

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, September 13



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 - 6:00 PM, September 13



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 - 8:00 PM, September 13



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, September 13



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 - 6:00 PM, September 13



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, September 13



Painting by Tricia Pucci
Echo

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

The first show of Tricia Pucci, an emerging artist based in Philadelphia where she is currently working on her degree in Interior Design at the Moore School of Art and Design.


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2:00 PM - 7:00 PM, September 13



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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5:00 PM - 5:00 PM, September 13



Opening Lov U
The Warehouse Gallery

The Warehouse Gallery
350 W. Fayette St., Syracuse

There will be an opening reception this evening 5:00-8:00 pm, including at performance at 7:00 pm.

"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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7:15 PM - 11:00 PM, September 13



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
 

9:00 PM, September 13



Movie Screening: Shut Up and Play the Hits
Westcott Theater

Price: $5 at the door
Westcott Theater
524 Westcott St., Syracuse


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Music
 

7:30 PM, September 13



Gala Opening Night with Marion Meadows
LeMoyne College

Price: $25
Coyne Center for the Performing Arts
LeMoyne College, Syracuse

Join jazz saxophonist Marion Meadows and local jazz professionals for an evening of smooth jazz! The evening will also feature a silent auction and champagne toast, with proceeds benefiting the Le Moyne College music program.

For more information or to reserve tickets, call 315-445-4523.


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Friday, September 14, 2012


Art
 

12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, September 14



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, September 14



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, September 14



Gallery Exhibit: Claude Freeman, Woods and Water
Onondaga Community College

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

Artist Statement: "Through my drawings I am creating a personal image of reality. It is not a reproduction of nature buy my expression of my emotions, sensations, and feelings, how that unique place impresses me. A photographed image preserves a visual event, but a drawing can entail the experience of seeing, of understanding atmosphere and space. In my drawings I try, for a change, to see things in black and white. I believe it is the only way to explore a uniquely natural landscape. The black and white landscapes have an almost mystical charm that changes with the time of day and season."

Claude Freeman is a Professor Emeritus at SUNY ESF where he taught Landscape Architecture for over 40 years. He now teaches drawing at the Art Department at OCC. Over many years his drawings have been accepted at numerous juried Art Shows including those at the Gibson Gallery in Potsdam, NY, the Lake Placid Center of the Arts in Lake Placid, NY, the Kirkland Art Center in Clinton, NY, Shelburne Farm's Art Exhibition in Shelburne, VT, and the Delavan Art Gallery, in Syracuse. Mr. Freeman has received a variety of awards and recognition for his artwork.


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9:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 14



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, September 14



Wild New York: The Photography of Chris Murray
Westcott Community Art Gallery

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


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 14



My Recovery Story
Community Folk Art Center

Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

A month-long exhibition sponsored by Syracuse Behavioral Healthcare, "My Recovery Story" features a collection of photographs taken by community members. The photographs chronicle their recovery from substance abuse addictions. For more information about the center and their exhibition click here.


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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 14



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.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, September 14



The Tall and Short of It
Gallery 54

Gallery 54
54 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

The exhibit features pottery by Jim Burke and paintings by Lisa Noviasky. Jim Burke's pottery combines function and style which makes his pieces both useful and unique. Lisa Noviasky paints with colors that best reflect the essence and emotional connection to the scene she is capturing.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, September 14



Fibers Expo: Wearable, Warm and Wonderful
Imagine

Imagine
38 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

To mark the expansion of its fibers collection, Imagine will present "Wearable, Warm and Wonderful," an exhibition of fiber art.

Works will be featured by:
* Luc Ends by Lucinda Snyder, of Rochester, who creates playful purses.
* Pandemonium Millinery, of Seattle, represented by its elegant faux fur hats and scarves.
* Miss Fitt Hats, of Durham, NC, which crafts hand-felted merino wool hats, scarves, mittens and other adornments.
* Maruca Design, of Boulder, CO, which designs and produces handbags, wallets and cosmetics cases, while embracing principles of the Arts & Crafts movement.
* Laurel Moranz, of Skaneateles, who creates rayon chenille scarves, shawls and snoods.
* Ginny Spina, of Jamesville, who designs scarves made from vintage kimono silk.


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10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, September 14



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, September 14



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 - 4:00 PM, September 14



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.


Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, September 14



An American Vision: East Meets West
Szozda Gallery

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

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

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 - 4:30 PM, September 14



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, September 14



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 - 6:00 PM, September 14



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, September 14



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, September 14



Painting by Tricia Pucci
Echo

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

The first show of Tricia Pucci, an emerging artist based in Philadelphia where she is currently working on her degree in Interior Design at the Moore School of Art and Design.


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2:00 PM - 7:00 PM, September 14



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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5:00 PM - 7:00 PM, September 14



Opening: TONY: 2012: Variography
Erie Canal Museum

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

There will be an opening reception this evening 5:00-7:00 pm.

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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6:00 PM - 8:00 PM, September 14



Play on Light
Edgewood Gallery

Price: Free
Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd., Syracuse

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

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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7:15 PM - 11:00 PM, September 14



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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Festival
 

11:00 AM - 11:00 PM, September 14



Festa Italiana

Price: Free
Washington St. (in front of City Hall)
Syracuse

4:15 pm: Jimmy Cavallo
6:30 pm: Letizia and The Z Band
7:50 pm: Alfio
9:00 pm: Atlas


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Lecture
 

7:00 PM, September 14



Feeling on the Outside: Ray Smith symposium kick-off
Syracuse University College of Arts and Sciences

Price: Free
Hendricks Chapel
Syracuse University, Syracuse

Displacement and dissent are the foci of two yearlong Ray Smith symposia at Syracuse University.

This kick-off event will feature a community panel discussion with Sean Quimby, librarian and senior director of the Special Collections Research Center; Luis Castañeda, associate professor of art and music histories in The College of Arts and Sciences; Juan Cruz, artist-in-residence in the Near West Side of Syracuse; and others. The discussion is followed by a musical performance by Trio Los Claveles and then by a mini-exhibition and reception.


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Music
 

11:15 AM, September 14



New York State Baroque Ensemble
Onondaga Community College

Price: Free
Storer Auditorium
Onondaga Community College, Syracuse


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7:30 PM, September 14



La Vida Bona
NYS Baroque

Price: $25 regular, $20 seniors, $10 college students, children free
St. David's Episcopal Church
13 Jamar Dr., Dewitt

A Spanish celebration, replete with guitars and castanets! Songs and dances of Arañes, Hidalgo, Duron, Marin, and others.

Performers include Nell Snaidas, soprano; Paul Shipper, voice and guitar; Grant Herreid, theorbo and vihuela; Julie Andrijeski and Boel Gidholm, violins; Heather Miller Lardin and David Morris, viols


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8:00 PM, September 14



Tommy Emmanuel
Guitar League
Featuring Loren Barrigar and Mark Mazengarb

Price: $35
Palace Theater
2384 James St., Syracuse

Two-time Grammy nominee Tommy Emmanuel is one of the world's most respected musicians. The legendary guitarist has a professional career that spans five decades and six continents. A household name in his native Australia, Tommy has garnered hundreds of thousands of loyal fans worldwide.

Emmanuel's unusual talent and life are common lore in Australia. Born into a musical family, Tommy and his older brother Phil were considered child prodigies. Tommy got his first guitar at age 4 and was taught by his mother. He learned by ear, with no formal instruction, and has never read music. By the age of 6, he was already working as a professional musician in the family band, variously named The Emmanuel Quartet, The Midget Surfaries, and The Trailblazers. Tommy played rhythm guitar and his older brother Phil played lead, along with their brother Chris on drums and sister Virginia on slide guitar. The Emmanuel siblings earned the family's sole income for several years. Tommy doesn't remember such responsibility as a hardship: "I've spent all my life from the age of four playing music and entertaining people. I never wanted to do anything else." By age 10, Emmanuel had played his way across Australia.

Tommy's unique style--he calls it simply "finger style"--is akin to playing guitar the way a pianist plays piano, using all 10 fingers. Rather than using a whole band for melody, rhythm, bass, and drum parts, Tommy plays all that, and more, on one guitar. Guitar legend Chet Atkins was one of the first to inspire Emmanuel to try this "fingerpicker" style as a child. Decades later, Atkins himself became one of Emmanuel's biggest fans.

Tickets available at www.brownpapertickets.com, Beat Street Music in Manlius, or Designer Warehouse on Walton Street in Armory Square.

For more information, visit www.guitarleague.com or email info@guitarleague.com.


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9:00 PM, September 14



The Devil Makes Three, with Brown Bird
Westcott Theater

Westcott Theater
524 Westcott St., Syracuse


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Theater
 

8:00 PM, September 14



The Real Inspector Hound
Appleseed Productions
Dan Stevens, director

Price: $18 regular, $15 student/senior
Atonement Lutheran Church
116 W. Glen Ave., Syracuse

Rave reviews greeted this farce by Tom Stoppard when it was recently revived in London. Feuding theatre critics Moon and Birdfoot, the first a fusty philanderer and the second a pompous and vindictive second stringer, are swept into the whodunit they are viewing. In the hilarious spoof of Agatha Christie-like melodramas that follows, the body under the sofa proves to be the missing first-string critic.

Read a Review!


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8:00 PM, September 14



Barefoot in the Park
Covey Theatre Company
Garrett Heater, director

Price: $21
BeVard Room, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St., Syracuse

Newlyweds Paul and Corie Bratter have moved from their honeymoon suite in the Plaza Hotel to their run-down 5-floor walkup in Manhattan. It's cold, leaky, and attracts unwanted guests such as Corie's sensitive mother Ethel and Victor Velasco, the eccentric resident of the attic who is known as the 'Bluebeard of 48th St.' Patrons who enjoyed previous Covey productions like Avenue Q and The Graduate will certainly fall in love with this delightful Valentine to the trials and joys of young love.

Starring Sara Weiler, Jesse Orton, Karis Wiggins, Ed Mastin, Bil Hughes, and Bernie Kaplan.

Read a Review!


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8:00 PM, September 14



Cry for Peace: Voices from the Congo (world premiere)
Syracuse Stage

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

Written by Ping Chong and Kyle Bass with Sara Zatz. Cyprien Mihigo, dramaturg/cultural consultant, in collaboration with the performers and the Congolese community of Syracuse

Based on in-depth interviews, Cry From Peace: Voices from the Congo brings to the stage five real people, including survivors and refugees from the recent Congolese civil war, members of once opposing tribes—the abductor and the violated--struggling to leave the past behind and form a peaceful community in Central New York. A composition of interwoven personal narratives, powerful images and beautiful songs, Cry for Peace is a rich theatrical experience—a searing, moving and hopeful hymn to the power of the human spirit. From the creators of the acclaimed Tales from the Salt City.

Read a Review!


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Saturday, September 15, 2012


Art
 

12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, September 15



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, September 15



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, September 15



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, September 15



The Tall and Short of It
Gallery 54

Gallery 54
54 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

The exhibit features pottery by Jim Burke and paintings by Lisa Noviasky. Jim Burke's pottery combines function and style which makes his pieces both useful and unique. Lisa Noviasky paints with colors that best reflect the essence and emotional connection to the scene she is capturing.


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10:00 AM - 7:00 PM, September 15



Fibers Expo: Wearable, Warm and Wonderful
Imagine

Imagine
38 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

To mark the expansion of its fibers collection, Imagine will present "Wearable, Warm and Wonderful," an exhibition of fiber art.

Works will be featured by:
* Luc Ends by Lucinda Snyder, of Rochester, who creates playful purses.
* Pandemonium Millinery, of Seattle, represented by its elegant faux fur hats and scarves.
* Miss Fitt Hats, of Durham, NC, which crafts hand-felted merino wool hats, scarves, mittens and other adornments.
* Maruca Design, of Boulder, CO, which designs and produces handbags, wallets and cosmetics cases, while embracing principles of the Arts & Crafts movement.
* Laurel Moranz, of Skaneateles, who creates rayon chenille scarves, shawls and snoods.
* Ginny Spina, of Jamesville, who designs scarves made from vintage kimono silk.


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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, September 15



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 - 4:00 PM, September 15



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, September 15



My Recovery Story
Community Folk Art Center

Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

A month-long exhibition sponsored by Syracuse Behavioral Healthcare, "My Recovery Story" features a collection of photographs taken by community members. The photographs chronicle their recovery from substance abuse addictions. For more information about the center and their exhibition click here.


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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, September 15



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, September 15



Painting by Tricia Pucci
Echo

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

The first show of Tricia Pucci, an emerging artist based in Philadelphia where she is currently working on her degree in Interior Design at the Moore School of Art and Design.


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, September 15



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, September 15



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, September 15



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, September 15



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, September 15



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.


Back to list
 

 

12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, September 15



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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7:15 PM - 11:00 PM, September 15



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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Festival
 

11:00 AM - 11:00 PM, September 15



Festa Italiana

Price: Free
Washington St. (in front of City Hall)
Syracuse

2:15 pm: Jonathan Howell
3:15 pm: Canzoni d'Italia
4:30 pm: Dance Centre North
5:30 pm: Jimmy Cavallo
7:45 pm: Alfio
9:00 pm: The Billionaires


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Film
 

8:00 PM, September 15



The Bicycle Thief
ArtRage Gallery

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

In poverty-stricken postwar Rome, a man who is desperate to feed his family is about to start a new job when his bike is stolen, and it is his only means of transportation for work. With his wide-eyed young son in hand, he sets off to find the thief. Simple in construction, yet rich in human insight, the film unfolds with the utter honesty and emotional honesty that are hallmarks of Italian Neorealism. (1948, directed by Vittorio deSica)


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Music
 

8:00 PM, September 15



Redhouse Regulars: The Baby Boomers
Redhouse

Price: $15 regular, $10 members
Former Redhouse Theater
219 S. West St., Syracuse

The Baby Boomers Band is a local seven-member band that plays favorites by Simon & Garfunkel, The Beatles, The Eagles, Van Morrison, The Mamas & Papas, The Rolling Stones, Elton John, Tom Petty, and more.


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Theater
 

12:30 PM, September 15



The Three Little Princess Pigs
Magic Circle Children's Theatre

Price: $5
Spaghetti Warehouse
689 N. Clinton St., Syracuse

Our own original, interactive, comedic version of the traditional three little pigs story, starring Mae-Mae, Dixie, and Priscilla Pig, who foil the big bad wolf with their combination of southern charm, and, of course, help from the children in the audience.


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8:00 PM, September 15



The Real Inspector Hound
Appleseed Productions
Dan Stevens, director

Price: $18 regular, $15 student/senior
Atonement Lutheran Church
116 W. Glen Ave., Syracuse

Rave reviews greeted this farce by Tom Stoppard when it was recently revived in London. Feuding theatre critics Moon and Birdfoot, the first a fusty philanderer and the second a pompous and vindictive second stringer, are swept into the whodunit they are viewing. In the hilarious spoof of Agatha Christie-like melodramas that follows, the body under the sofa proves to be the missing first-string critic.

Read a Review!


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8:00 PM, September 15



Opening Gala Senior Cabaret
Black Box Players
Sammy Lopez, director

Price: Free (limited seating)
Dolce Vita
907 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

Featuring Kyle Anderson, Benji Ashe, Blair Beasley, Samantha Blinn, Lizzy Boyke, Maclain Dassatti, Joseph Fierberg, Maiya Gibson, Olivia Gjurich, Brian Michael Hart, Ben Holtzman, Katie Lamark, Sammy Lopez, Micah Nameroff, Erin Nishimura, Elliot Peterson, David Siciliano, Heather Siemienas.

Musical direction by Ben Holtzman, accompanied by Tevi Eber.


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8:00 PM, September 15



Barefoot in the Park
Covey Theatre Company
Garrett Heater, director

Price: $21
BeVard Room, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St., Syracuse

Newlyweds Paul and Corie Bratter have moved from their honeymoon suite in the Plaza Hotel to their run-down 5-floor walkup in Manhattan. It's cold, leaky, and attracts unwanted guests such as Corie's sensitive mother Ethel and Victor Velasco, the eccentric resident of the attic who is known as the 'Bluebeard of 48th St.' Patrons who enjoyed previous Covey productions like Avenue Q and The Graduate will certainly fall in love with this delightful Valentine to the trials and joys of young love.

Starring Sara Weiler, Jesse Orton, Karis Wiggins, Ed Mastin, Bil Hughes, and Bernie Kaplan.

Read a Review!


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8:00 PM, September 15



Cry for Peace: Voices from the Congo (world premiere)
Syracuse Stage

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

Written by Ping Chong and Kyle Bass with Sara Zatz. Cyprien Mihigo, dramaturg/cultural consultant, in collaboration with the performers and the Congolese community of Syracuse

Based on in-depth interviews, Cry From Peace: Voices from the Congo brings to the stage five real people, including survivors and refugees from the recent Congolese civil war, members of once opposing tribes—the abductor and the violated--struggling to leave the past behind and form a peaceful community in Central New York. A composition of interwoven personal narratives, powerful images and beautiful songs, Cry for Peace is a rich theatrical experience—a searing, moving and hopeful hymn to the power of the human spirit. From the creators of the acclaimed Tales from the Salt City.

Read a Review!


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Sunday, September 16, 2012


Art
 

12:00 AM - 11:59 PM, September 16



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, September 16



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, September 16



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 - 6:00 PM, September 16



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 - 4:00 PM, September 16



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, September 16



The Tall and Short of It
Gallery 54

Gallery 54
54 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

The exhibit features pottery by Jim Burke and paintings by Lisa Noviasky. Jim Burke's pottery combines function and style which makes his pieces both useful and unique. Lisa Noviasky paints with colors that best reflect the essence and emotional connection to the scene she is capturing.


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11:00 AM - 6:00 PM, September 16



Fibers Expo: Wearable, Warm and Wonderful
Imagine

Imagine
38 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles

To mark the expansion of its fibers collection, Imagine will present "Wearable, Warm and Wonderful," an exhibition of fiber art.

Works will be featured by:
* Luc Ends by Lucinda Snyder, of Rochester, who creates playful purses.
* Pandemonium Millinery, of Seattle, represented by its elegant faux fur hats and scarves.
* Miss Fitt Hats, of Durham, NC, which crafts hand-felted merino wool hats, scarves, mittens and other adornments.
* Maruca Design, of Boulder, CO, which designs and produces handbags, wallets and cosmetics cases, while embracing principles of the Arts & Crafts movement.
* Laurel Moranz, of Skaneateles, who creates rayon chenille scarves, shawls and snoods.
* Ginny Spina, of Jamesville, who designs scarves made from vintage kimono silk.


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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, September 16



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, September 16



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, September 16



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 - 6:00 PM, September 16



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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Festival
 

11:00 AM - 7:00 PM, September 16



Festa Italiana

Price: Free
Washington St. (in front of City Hall)
Syracuse

2:00 pm: Tallo Larham
3:15 pm: Nova
5:15 pm: Jimmy Cavallo


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Film
 

4:00 PM, September 16



Kinshasa Symphony
Cinema Syracuse

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

Following the 2:00 pm Syracuse Stage performance of Cry For Peace: Voices From The Congo, Cinema Syracuse is thrilled to begin its season with Kinshasa Symphony, showing how people living there have managed to forge one of the most complex systems of human cooperation ever invented: a symphony orchestra (Orchestre Symphonique Kimbanguiste). Kinshasa Symphony shows Kinshasa in all its diversity, speed, colour, vitality and energy. It is a film about the Congo, about the people of Kinshasa and about music.

For more information, check the Facebook Event page.


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Music
 

4:00 PM, September 16



Syracuse Opera Resident Artists in Concert
Syracuse Opera

Price: $10 adults, $8 students, under 12 free
St. Stephen's Lutheran Church
DeWitt St. and Mertens Ave., Syracuse


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Theater
 

2:00 PM, September 16



Cry for Peace: Voices from the Congo (world premiere)
Syracuse Stage

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

Written by Ping Chong and Kyle Bass with Sara Zatz. Cyprien Mihigo, dramaturg/cultural consultant, in collaboration with the performers and the Congolese community of Syracuse

Based on in-depth interviews, Cry From Peace: Voices from the Congo brings to the stage five real people, including survivors and refugees from the recent Congolese civil war, members of once opposing tribes—the abductor and the violated--struggling to leave the past behind and form a peaceful community in Central New York. A composition of interwoven personal narratives, powerful images and beautiful songs, Cry for Peace is a rich theatrical experience—a searing, moving and hopeful hymn to the power of the human spirit. From the creators of the acclaimed Tales from the Salt City.

Read a Review!


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