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Events for Friday, November 14, 2025
9:30 AM-6:00 PM
Colorful Celebrations Edgewood Gallery
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
Emptiness: Works By Abisay Puentes Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Tough Skin, Soft Ribs Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Everything Nice: Sasha Phyars-Burgess Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
Bhen Alan: Why Does My Adobo Taste Different? Syracuse University Art Museum
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
“What If I Try This?”: Helen Frankenthaler in the 20th-Century Print Ecosystem Syracuse University Art Museum
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
Human/Environment: 4,000 Years of Art Syracuse University Art Museum
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
A Sense of Arrival: Kevin Adonis Browne Syracuse University Art Museum
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
Patterns of Resistance Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
Lessons in Geometry Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
Jake Troyli: Open Season Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
Joyce Kozloff: Contested Territories, 1983-2023 Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Corpórea La Casita Cultural Center
5:15 PM-11:00 PM
The Portal's Keeper Urban Video Project
6:30 PM
Music as Healing: Echoes of Falling Leaves Concert Community Folk Art Center
7:00 PM
The World Famous Glenn Miller Orchestra The Oncenter
7:30 PM
Live from Jazz Central: Jeff Lederer with the Lamb, Mack, and Sorgen Trio CNY Jazz Arts Foundation
7:30 PM
Lizzie Borden Took an Axe Covey Theatre Company
8:00 PM
Preview: Antigonick Syracuse University Drama Department
Events for Saturday, November 15, 2025
10:00 AM-2:30 PM
Emptiness: Works By Abisay Puentes Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Laurent Craste: Iconoclasts Everson Museum of Art
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Joyce Kozloff: Contested Territories, 1983-2023 Everson Museum of Art
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Jake Troyli: Open Season Everson Museum of Art
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Lessons in Geometry Everson Museum of Art
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Patterns of Resistance Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-6:00 PM
Everything Nice: Sasha Phyars-Burgess Light Work Gallery
11:00 AM-6:00 PM
Tough Skin, Soft Ribs Light Work Gallery
12:00 PM-4:00 PM
Bhen Alan: Why Does My Adobo Taste Different? Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-4:00 PM
“What If I Try This?”: Helen Frankenthaler in the 20th-Century Print Ecosystem Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-4:00 PM
A Sense of Arrival: Kevin Adonis Browne Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-4:00 PM
Human/Environment: 4,000 Years of Art Syracuse University Art Museum
5:15 PM-11:00 PM
The Portal's Keeper Urban Video Project
6:00 PM-8:00 PM
Opening: Reclaiming Our Collective Inheritance: A Palestinian Diaspora Collection ArtRage Gallery
7:00 PM
The Jamie McLean Band The 443 Social Club
7:30 PM
Lizzie Borden Took an Axe Covey Theatre Company
7:30 PM
Gonzalo P. Biedma, guitar Skaneateles Library Guitar Series
7:30 PM
Masterworks Series: Elgar's Enigma Variations Syracuse Orchestra (formerly Symphoria), featuring Aaron Wunsch and Giancarlo Llerena, pianists
8:00 PM
Opening: Antigonick Syracuse University Drama Department
Events for Sunday, November 16, 2025
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Patterns of Resistance Everson Museum of Art
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Lessons in Geometry Everson Museum of Art
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Jake Troyli: Open Season Everson Museum of Art
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Joyce Kozloff: Contested Territories, 1983-2023 Everson Museum of Art
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Laurent Craste: Iconoclasts Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-6:00 PM
Everything Nice: Sasha Phyars-Burgess Light Work Gallery
11:00 AM-6:00 PM
Tough Skin, Soft Ribs Light Work Gallery
12:00 PM-4:00 PM
Bhen Alan: Why Does My Adobo Taste Different? Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-4:00 PM
“What If I Try This?”: Helen Frankenthaler in the 20th-Century Print Ecosystem Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-4:00 PM
Human/Environment: 4,000 Years of Art Syracuse University Art Museum
12:00 PM-4:00 PM
A Sense of Arrival: Kevin Adonis Browne Syracuse University Art Museum
1:00 PM
Nachos & Blancos The 443 Social Club
2:00 PM
Clarinet Serenade Silverwood Clarinet Choir
2:00 PM
Antigonick Syracuse University Drama Department
4:00 PM
Malmgren Concert Series: Fall Choral Concert Hendricks Chapel
Events for Monday, November 17, 2025
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
Emptiness: Works By Abisay Puentes Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
Tough Skin, Soft Ribs Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
Everything Nice: Sasha Phyars-Burgess Light Work Gallery
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Corpórea La Casita Cultural Center
Events for Tuesday, November 18, 2025
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
Emptiness: Works By Abisay Puentes Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
Everything Nice: Sasha Phyars-Burgess Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
Tough Skin, Soft Ribs Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
Bhen Alan: Why Does My Adobo Taste Different? Syracuse University Art Museum
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
“What If I Try This?”: Helen Frankenthaler in the 20th-Century Print Ecosystem Syracuse University Art Museum
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
A Sense of Arrival: Kevin Adonis Browne Syracuse University Art Museum
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
Human/Environment: 4,000 Years of Art Syracuse University Art Museum
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Corpórea La Casita Cultural Center
Events for Wednesday, November 19, 2025
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
Emptiness: Works By Abisay Puentes Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
Everything Nice: Sasha Phyars-Burgess Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
Tough Skin, Soft Ribs Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
Bhen Alan: Why Does My Adobo Taste Different? Syracuse University Art Museum
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
Human/Environment: 4,000 Years of Art Syracuse University Art Museum
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
A Sense of Arrival: Kevin Adonis Browne Syracuse University Art Museum
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
“What If I Try This?”: Helen Frankenthaler in the 20th-Century Print Ecosystem Syracuse University Art Museum
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
Joyce Kozloff: Contested Territories, 1983-2023 Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
Jake Troyli: Open Season Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
Lessons in Geometry Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
Patterns of Resistance Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
Laurent Craste: Iconoclasts Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Corpórea La Casita Cultural Center
2:00 PM-6:00 PM
Reclaiming Our Collective Inheritance: A Palestinian Diaspora Collection ArtRage Gallery
8:00 PM
Antigonick Syracuse University Drama Department
Events for Thursday, November 20, 2025
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
Emptiness: Works By Abisay Puentes Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
Tough Skin, Soft Ribs Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-9:00 PM
Everything Nice: Sasha Phyars-Burgess Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
Bhen Alan: Why Does My Adobo Taste Different? Syracuse University Art Museum
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
“What If I Try This?”: Helen Frankenthaler in the 20th-Century Print Ecosystem Syracuse University Art Museum
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
A Sense of Arrival: Kevin Adonis Browne Syracuse University Art Museum
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
Human/Environment: 4,000 Years of Art Syracuse University Art Museum
11:00 AM-8:00 PM
Patterns of Resistance Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-8:00 PM
Lessons in Geometry Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-8:00 PM
Jake Troyli: Open Season Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-8:00 PM
Joyce Kozloff: Contested Territories, 1983-2023 Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-8:00 PM
Laurent Craste: Iconoclasts Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Corpórea La Casita Cultural Center
2:00 PM-6:00 PM
Reclaiming Our Collective Inheritance: A Palestinian Diaspora Collection ArtRage Gallery
5:15 PM-11:00 PM
The Portal's Keeper Urban Video Project
6:00 PM-7:00 PM
Gallery Talk with Artist Jake Troyli Everson Museum of Art
7:00 PM
The Dangerous Variety Acme Mystery Company
7:00 PM
Loren & LJ Barrigar The 443 Social Club
8:00 PM
Antigonick Syracuse University Drama Department
Events for Friday, November 21, 2025
10:00 AM-8:00 PM
Emptiness: Works By Abisay Puentes Community Folk Art Center
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
40th Annual Gingerbread Gallery Erie Canal Museum
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Tough Skin, Soft Ribs Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-5:00 PM
Everything Nice: Sasha Phyars-Burgess Light Work Gallery
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
Bhen Alan: Why Does My Adobo Taste Different? Syracuse University Art Museum
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
“What If I Try This?”: Helen Frankenthaler in the 20th-Century Print Ecosystem Syracuse University Art Museum
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
Human/Environment: 4,000 Years of Art Syracuse University Art Museum
10:00 AM-4:00 PM
A Sense of Arrival: Kevin Adonis Browne Syracuse University Art Museum
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
Joyce Kozloff: Contested Territories, 1983-2023 Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
Jake Troyli: Open Season Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
Lessons in Geometry Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
Patterns of Resistance Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-5:00 PM
Laurent Craste: Iconoclasts Everson Museum of Art
11:00 AM-4:00 PM
Corpórea La Casita Cultural Center
2:00 PM-6:00 PM
Reclaiming Our Collective Inheritance: A Palestinian Diaspora Collection ArtRage Gallery
5:15 PM-11:00 PM
The Portal's Keeper Urban Video Project
7:00 PM
Author Matthew Gavin Frank Downtown Writer's Center
7:00 PM
Ellen Pieroni & The Encyclopedia of Soul The 443 Social Club
7:30 PM
Lizzie Borden Took an Axe Covey Theatre Company
8:00 PM
*SOLD OUT* Lucky Numbers: EP Release Show CNY Jazz Arts Foundation
8:00 PM
The Rough & Tumble Folkus Project
8:00 PM
Antigonick Syracuse University Drama Department
Friday, November 14, 2025
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9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, November 14 |
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Colorful Celebrations Edgewood Gallery
Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd.,
Syracuse
Jim Ridlon: recent collection of paintings expressing reactions to intense thoughts and experiences Tom Slocum: organic wood sculpture Belle Pietre jewelry: founder and designer Rebecca Carr's collection of jewelry inspired by operatic heroines
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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, November 14 |
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Emptiness: Works By Abisay Puentes Community Folk Art Center
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
A solo exhibition of 25 acrylic on canvas pieces. The exhibition will be on view, inviting art enthusiasts to immerse themselves in Puentes' interwoven tapestry of three inseparable languages — poetry, painting, and music. The exhibition will also feature an interactive video component that intertwines art and classical music. Far from being an occasional addition, this medium expands the experience Puentes has cultivated for years, offering the viewer another gateway into the symbolic and existential narrative that defines his work.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 14 |
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Tough Skin, Soft Ribs Light Work Gallery
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Light Work presents "Tough Skin, Soft Ribs," a selection of photographs from our collection by Marcus Xavier Chormicle, Jeremy Dennis, Amy Elkins, Tarrah Krajnak, Shelley Niro, Wendy Red Star, Pamela Shields, Hulleah Tsinhnahjinnie, Kathy Vargas, and Cristina Velásquez. This exhibition is curated by Cali M. Banks, who manages communications and outreach at Light Work. Resistant to 19th-century staged portraits of Indigenous people and the posed photographic work of Edward S. Curtis, the chosen artists confront colonial frameworks of Northern, Central, and Southern Indigeneity. This grouping of artists points back to the Four Directions, a cultural foundation that honors a holistic view of our interconnectedness; a place where borders do not exist, and we can join together as relatives. Through spectacles of Indigenous tropes, satire, religious testaments, diasporic histories, and fantasy, these artists are unpacking stereotypes, forcing a reclamation of personal and collective identities.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 14 |
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Everything Nice: Sasha Phyars-Burgess Light Work Gallery
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Sasha Phyars-Burgess's photographic project "Everything Nice" traces her family history through Portugal, the Dominican Republic, Florida, and Louisiana, following the paths of sugarcane farmed on colonial plantations and the transatlantic slave trade in relation to her ancestors. The photographs are taken in various locations: Madeira, Portugal, the Dominican Republic, Florida, and Louisiana. The pictures provide clues and details that are layered into a larger story. Looking back at history and locating the present, Phyars-Burgess is thinking through the idea that we are all living in a history, whether it is acknowledged or not. Once acknowledged, and if we allow ourselves to live with the past, with choices made by and for others, we can access a wider view of the present day.
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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 14 |
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Bhen Alan: Why Does My Adobo Taste Different? Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The fifth iteration of the Art Wall Project features textiles made by the Filipino-American artist Bhen Alan. Through the creation of a monumental banig, or a traditional Filipino handwoven mat made from plant fibers, Alan grapples with the traumas of immigration and explores how diasporic communities work to recover a lost idea of home.
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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 14 |
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“What If I Try This?”: Helen Frankenthaler in the 20th-Century Print Ecosystem Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
"What If I Try This?" explores how Helen Frankenthaler, the noted 20th-century abstract artist, collaborated with printmakers in print studios and workshops throughout her long career. By focusing on her works on paper, this exhibition considers how printshops are key nodes within the printmaking ecosystems, or sites where artists and printers simultaneously championed technical innovations and created community.
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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 14 |
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Human/Environment: 4,000 Years of Art Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Drawing on the museum's extensive collection that encompasses almost 45,000 historic and contemporary artworks made around the globe, this exhibition explores how humans have interacted with and shaped the environment in which they live. Thematic sections focus on plants, home, population centers, and human figures.
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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 14 |
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A Sense of Arrival: Kevin Adonis Browne Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
"A Sense of Arrival" brings together scholarship and artistic practice in a multimedia installation by Kevin Adonis Browne, professor of rhetoric and writing in the Department of Writing Studies in the College of Arts and Sciences. Browne's exhibition combines photographs, sculpture, and new writings that reflect a decades-long meditation on Caribbean blackness, being, and rhetorical expression.
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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 14 |
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Patterns of Resistance Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
In the early 1970s, the Pattern & Decoration Movement emerged as an antidote to the vice grip in which abstraction had held American art since the 1950s. Artists like Valerie Jaudon, Joyce Kozloff, and Miriam Shapiro began juxtaposing colors and patterns that critics and artists alike had previously dismissed as feminine to powerful effect. Simultaneously, other feminist artists like Lynda Benglis were consciously subverting clay's associations as a masculine and/or craft medium. As the '70s played out, a generation of artists like Andrea Gill, Nancy Selvin, and Betty Woodman did not just embrace the decorative strategies of the Pattern & Decoration Movement, they also sought to place a feminist spin on their work. As ceramics become more common in a fine art context, hierarchies surrounding different materials faded, giving artists the ability to experiment and construct narrative and meaning through pattern. Long denigrated as "decorative" and closely associated with domesticity, patterns are now an integral part of the language of contemporary art.
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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 14 |
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Lessons in Geometry Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Artists have obsessed over the relationship between mathematics and art for millennia. As artists turned toward abstraction in the early 20th century, Europeans like Piet Mondrian used geometry to create a set of rules and parameters that guided their creative process. Meanwhile, American artists began developing their own styles and movements—particularly Abstract Expressionism, which was typified by bold, quickly executed brushwork, drips, and splashes. In the mid-20th century in the United States, artists laid the groundwork for Geometric Abstraction as a more cerebral alternative to the often macho flamboyance of Abstract Expressionism. Over the ensuing decades, artists used geometry to produce abstract works that ranged from the dazzling Op Art of Victor Vasarely to the restrained Minimalism of Sol LeWitt. "Lessons in Geometry" traces the evolution of hard-edged abstraction in the United States as artists sought to use pure geometric forms to create works with balance, harmony, and order. For these artists, shape, line, and color took precedence over representational compositions. The Everson's collection reflects the wildly varied ways that artists have used geometry to serve their personal expression, from the analytical formulations of Robert Swain to the shaped canvases of Harmony Hammond and the spatial illusions of Tony King.
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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 14 |
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Jake Troyli: Open Season Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Jake Troyli's works address the commodification of Black and Brown bodies, confronting and exploring labor capitalism and sweat equity as a demonstration of value. Troyli also injects his paintings with a sense of humor and absurdity through the inclusion of his own self-portrait. His avatar populates the works in "Open Season," where Troyli is both the hunter and the hunted as he participates in a variety of physical activities. As a former Division I basketball player, Troyli has a potent understanding of how athletes in America, particularly athletes of color, are simultaneously celebrated and criticized.
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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 14 |
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Joyce Kozloff: Contested Territories, 1983-2023 Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
For more than four decades, Joyce Kozloff has explored how the entanglements of geography, history, and power influence the visual language of maps. "Contested Territories" presents a selection of Kozloff's works that uncover how maps shape our understanding of the world—not as neutral tools, but as instruments of influence, ideology, and control. Kozloff's wide range of sources include historical maps, classroom wall maps, atlases, globes, and even satellite imagery from Google Maps. Her dense and colorful works often layer these materials with hand-painted details, collage, and intricate ornamentation. By combining sources that span centuries—from Renaissance celestial charts to contemporary digital mapping—she exposes how maps carry the legacies of empire, conflict, and shifting territorial claims. A founding figure in the Pattern and Decoration movement, Kozloff combines meticulous craftsmanship with political critique. Her works are labor-intensive, involving the detailed process of painting, drawing, and collaging over cartographic surfaces. The resulting richly textured visual field invites viewers to look closely—and to question the conquest, division, and erasure found beneath the official surface narrative. Whether reimagining educational globes or deconstructing colonial-era charts, Kozloff transforms maps from static documents into contested, dynamic spaces. Her work encourages viewers to reconsider how borders are drawn as well as how art can reclaim such boundaries as sites of resistance, memory, and possibility.
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 14 |
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Corpórea La Casita Cultural Center
La Casita Cultural Center
109 Otisco St.,
Syracuse
Corpórea is a showcase of powerful, large-scale works in mixed media, body maps created by a collaborative of local Latino artists, community members, SU faculty and students through a series of adult workshops that integrate the principles of Art Therapy. Facilitated by Syracuse University graduate student in Creative Art Therapy, Bennie Guzmán, the workshops explored themes of healing, identity, and embodiment, and the transformative power of creativity.
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5:15 PM - 11:00 PM, November 14 |
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The Portal's Keeper Urban Video Project
Price: Free Everson Museum of Art Plaza
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Media artists LaJuné McMillian and Manuel Molina Martagon worked with local, community-engaged creatives Kofi Antwi, Clove Flores, Sofia Gutierrez, and Martikah Williams. Together, they discussed their practices and their visions for a liberated future. The artists asked them to embody their answers not only through words, but through movement as well. "The Portal's Keeper" realizes those visions through the technological "portal" of a popular game engine better known for first-person shooter and battle royale MMO games. Here, the artists use this technology not to realistically simulate violence, but instead as a means to represent what liberation might look like. Screening, projected on the museum wall, begins at dusk.
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Music |
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6:30 PM, November 14 |
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Music as Healing: Echoes of Falling Leaves Concert Community Folk Art Center
Price: Free Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
A night of music and harmony celebrating the season of gratitude and thanksgiving performed by Upstate medical students for the Syracuse Community.
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7:30 PM, November 14 |
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Live from Jazz Central: Jeff Lederer with the Lamb, Mack, and Sorgen Trio CNY Jazz Arts Foundation
Price: $25 in advance, $30 at the door Jazz Central
441 E. Washington St.,
Syracuse
Tickets
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Theater |
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7:00 PM, November 14 |
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The World Famous Glenn Miller Orchestra The Oncenter
Carrier Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
"In The Mood" for swing music? The most popular and sought after big band of all time returns to Syracuse for an evening of swing music.
Tickets
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7:30 PM, November 14 |
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Lizzie Borden Took an Axe Covey Theatre Company Garrett Heater, director
Hosmer Auditorium, Everson Museum
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The brutal 1892 double homicide of Fall River, MA, mill owner Andrew Borden and his second wife Abby shocked Victorian Americans. Suspicion quickly fell on Andrew's daughter Lizzie, resulting in a sensationalized trial and Lizzie's eventual acquittal. The most historically accurate play on the subject, Lizzie Borden Took an Axe, by Garrett Heater brings court transcripts and testimony of the horrific murders to dramatic life. Having inaugurated the company in 2010, Lizzie ... celebrates 15 years of Covey Theater in Syracuse with this brand new production.
Tickets
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8:00 PM, November 14 |
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Preview: Antigonick Syracuse University Drama Department Matthew Winning and Erica Murphy, director
Storch Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Canadian poet Anne Carson's stunning translation revives and boldly reworks Sophokles' tragic meditation on tyranny and civil disobedience.
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Saturday, November 15, 2025
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Art |
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10:00 AM - 2:30 PM, November 15 |
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Emptiness: Works By Abisay Puentes Community Folk Art Center
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
A solo exhibition of 25 acrylic on canvas pieces. The exhibition will be on view, inviting art enthusiasts to immerse themselves in Puentes' interwoven tapestry of three inseparable languages — poetry, painting, and music. The exhibition will also feature an interactive video component that intertwines art and classical music. Far from being an occasional addition, this medium expands the experience Puentes has cultivated for years, offering the viewer another gateway into the symbolic and existential narrative that defines his work.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 15 |
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Laurent Craste: Iconoclasts Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
"Iconoclasts" marks the American museum debut for French-born Canadian ceramist Laurent Craste. Over the past decade, Craste has committed a wide range of indignities and abuse against his ornate vases and urns, including pummeling them with baseball bats and crowbars and piercing them with arrows. Despite the violence that runs through his work, Craste has a great passion for historical porcelain. Working with porcelain allows Craste to explore the prestige and power of upper-class society, but also inequality and the strain that is placed on working people. The anthropomorphic nature of Craste's vases echoes the human body, making it no surprise that people feel strong emotions when seeing a helpless vase struck by a baseball bat. Triggering these strong emotions in his audience allows Craste to connect on a deeper level as he asks questions about class, money, and power.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 15 |
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Joyce Kozloff: Contested Territories, 1983-2023 Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
For more than four decades, Joyce Kozloff has explored how the entanglements of geography, history, and power influence the visual language of maps. "Contested Territories" presents a selection of Kozloff's works that uncover how maps shape our understanding of the world—not as neutral tools, but as instruments of influence, ideology, and control. Kozloff's wide range of sources include historical maps, classroom wall maps, atlases, globes, and even satellite imagery from Google Maps. Her dense and colorful works often layer these materials with hand-painted details, collage, and intricate ornamentation. By combining sources that span centuries—from Renaissance celestial charts to contemporary digital mapping—she exposes how maps carry the legacies of empire, conflict, and shifting territorial claims. A founding figure in the Pattern and Decoration movement, Kozloff combines meticulous craftsmanship with political critique. Her works are labor-intensive, involving the detailed process of painting, drawing, and collaging over cartographic surfaces. The resulting richly textured visual field invites viewers to look closely—and to question the conquest, division, and erasure found beneath the official surface narrative. Whether reimagining educational globes or deconstructing colonial-era charts, Kozloff transforms maps from static documents into contested, dynamic spaces. Her work encourages viewers to reconsider how borders are drawn as well as how art can reclaim such boundaries as sites of resistance, memory, and possibility.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 15 |
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Jake Troyli: Open Season Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Jake Troyli's works address the commodification of Black and Brown bodies, confronting and exploring labor capitalism and sweat equity as a demonstration of value. Troyli also injects his paintings with a sense of humor and absurdity through the inclusion of his own self-portrait. His avatar populates the works in "Open Season," where Troyli is both the hunter and the hunted as he participates in a variety of physical activities. As a former Division I basketball player, Troyli has a potent understanding of how athletes in America, particularly athletes of color, are simultaneously celebrated and criticized.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 15 |
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Lessons in Geometry Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Artists have obsessed over the relationship between mathematics and art for millennia. As artists turned toward abstraction in the early 20th century, Europeans like Piet Mondrian used geometry to create a set of rules and parameters that guided their creative process. Meanwhile, American artists began developing their own styles and movements—particularly Abstract Expressionism, which was typified by bold, quickly executed brushwork, drips, and splashes. In the mid-20th century in the United States, artists laid the groundwork for Geometric Abstraction as a more cerebral alternative to the often macho flamboyance of Abstract Expressionism. Over the ensuing decades, artists used geometry to produce abstract works that ranged from the dazzling Op Art of Victor Vasarely to the restrained Minimalism of Sol LeWitt. "Lessons in Geometry" traces the evolution of hard-edged abstraction in the United States as artists sought to use pure geometric forms to create works with balance, harmony, and order. For these artists, shape, line, and color took precedence over representational compositions. The Everson's collection reflects the wildly varied ways that artists have used geometry to serve their personal expression, from the analytical formulations of Robert Swain to the shaped canvases of Harmony Hammond and the spatial illusions of Tony King.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 15 |
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Patterns of Resistance Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
In the early 1970s, the Pattern & Decoration Movement emerged as an antidote to the vice grip in which abstraction had held American art since the 1950s. Artists like Valerie Jaudon, Joyce Kozloff, and Miriam Shapiro began juxtaposing colors and patterns that critics and artists alike had previously dismissed as feminine to powerful effect. Simultaneously, other feminist artists like Lynda Benglis were consciously subverting clay's associations as a masculine and/or craft medium. As the '70s played out, a generation of artists like Andrea Gill, Nancy Selvin, and Betty Woodman did not just embrace the decorative strategies of the Pattern & Decoration Movement, they also sought to place a feminist spin on their work. As ceramics become more common in a fine art context, hierarchies surrounding different materials faded, giving artists the ability to experiment and construct narrative and meaning through pattern. Long denigrated as "decorative" and closely associated with domesticity, patterns are now an integral part of the language of contemporary art.
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Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 15 |
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Everything Nice: Sasha Phyars-Burgess Light Work Gallery
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Sasha Phyars-Burgess's photographic project "Everything Nice" traces her family history through Portugal, the Dominican Republic, Florida, and Louisiana, following the paths of sugarcane farmed on colonial plantations and the transatlantic slave trade in relation to her ancestors. The photographs are taken in various locations: Madeira, Portugal, the Dominican Republic, Florida, and Louisiana. The pictures provide clues and details that are layered into a larger story. Looking back at history and locating the present, Phyars-Burgess is thinking through the idea that we are all living in a history, whether it is acknowledged or not. Once acknowledged, and if we allow ourselves to live with the past, with choices made by and for others, we can access a wider view of the present day.
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Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 15 |
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Tough Skin, Soft Ribs Light Work Gallery
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Light Work presents "Tough Skin, Soft Ribs," a selection of photographs from our collection by Marcus Xavier Chormicle, Jeremy Dennis, Amy Elkins, Tarrah Krajnak, Shelley Niro, Wendy Red Star, Pamela Shields, Hulleah Tsinhnahjinnie, Kathy Vargas, and Cristina Velásquez. This exhibition is curated by Cali M. Banks, who manages communications and outreach at Light Work. Resistant to 19th-century staged portraits of Indigenous people and the posed photographic work of Edward S. Curtis, the chosen artists confront colonial frameworks of Northern, Central, and Southern Indigeneity. This grouping of artists points back to the Four Directions, a cultural foundation that honors a holistic view of our interconnectedness; a place where borders do not exist, and we can join together as relatives. Through spectacles of Indigenous tropes, satire, religious testaments, diasporic histories, and fantasy, these artists are unpacking stereotypes, forcing a reclamation of personal and collective identities.
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Back to list |
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12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, November 15 |
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Bhen Alan: Why Does My Adobo Taste Different? Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The fifth iteration of the Art Wall Project features textiles made by the Filipino-American artist Bhen Alan. Through the creation of a monumental banig, or a traditional Filipino handwoven mat made from plant fibers, Alan grapples with the traumas of immigration and explores how diasporic communities work to recover a lost idea of home.
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Back to list |
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12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, November 15 |
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“What If I Try This?”: Helen Frankenthaler in the 20th-Century Print Ecosystem Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
"What If I Try This?" explores how Helen Frankenthaler, the noted 20th-century abstract artist, collaborated with printmakers in print studios and workshops throughout her long career. By focusing on her works on paper, this exhibition considers how printshops are key nodes within the printmaking ecosystems, or sites where artists and printers simultaneously championed technical innovations and created community.
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Back to list |
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12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, November 15 |
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A Sense of Arrival: Kevin Adonis Browne Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
"A Sense of Arrival" brings together scholarship and artistic practice in a multimedia installation by Kevin Adonis Browne, professor of rhetoric and writing in the Department of Writing Studies in the College of Arts and Sciences. Browne's exhibition combines photographs, sculpture, and new writings that reflect a decades-long meditation on Caribbean blackness, being, and rhetorical expression.
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Back to list |
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12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, November 15 |
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Human/Environment: 4,000 Years of Art Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Drawing on the museum's extensive collection that encompasses almost 45,000 historic and contemporary artworks made around the globe, this exhibition explores how humans have interacted with and shaped the environment in which they live. Thematic sections focus on plants, home, population centers, and human figures.
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5:15 PM - 11:00 PM, November 15 |
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The Portal's Keeper Urban Video Project
Price: Free Everson Museum of Art Plaza
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Media artists LaJuné McMillian and Manuel Molina Martagon worked with local, community-engaged creatives Kofi Antwi, Clove Flores, Sofia Gutierrez, and Martikah Williams. Together, they discussed their practices and their visions for a liberated future. The artists asked them to embody their answers not only through words, but through movement as well. "The Portal's Keeper" realizes those visions through the technological "portal" of a popular game engine better known for first-person shooter and battle royale MMO games. Here, the artists use this technology not to realistically simulate violence, but instead as a means to represent what liberation might look like. Screening, projected on the museum wall, begins at dusk.
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6:00 PM - 8:00 PM, November 15 |
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Opening: Reclaiming Our Collective Inheritance: A Palestinian Diaspora Collection ArtRage Gallery
Price: Free ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave.,
Syracuse
There will be an opening reception this evening 6:00-8:00 pm. The Palestinian thobe is more than an embroidered garment — it is a living archive. For Palestinians in the diaspora, these intricately stitched dresses are tangible connections to a homeland many have never seen, yet fiercely carry within them. Each motif tells a story — of identity, ancestral village, and unbroken resilience. Tragically, many thobes have been lost to time, war, and dispossession — from heirloom dresses smuggled out of Palestine to stolen thobes rediscovered in antique markets, their narratives preserved only in the whispers of fading thread. This exhibit, "Reclaiming Our Collective Inheritance," is both a memorial and a call to action: to rescue, preserve, remember, and honor the hands that embroidered them. More than fabric, these thobes weave memory and return into every stitch. This is more than an exhibit — it is a reclamation. An act of cultural preservation which ensures that this art form, and the Palestinian narrative itself, remains alive for future generations.
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Music |
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7:00 PM, November 15 |
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The Jamie McLean Band The 443 Social Club
The 443 Social Club
443 Burnet Ave.,
Syracuse
Jamie McLean Band is a triple threat. The group's energetic and captivating live show is undeniable. McLean's fiery guitar has joined the ranks of Derek Trucks, Gregg Allman, Aaron Neville, Dr. John, and more on stages from Madison Square Garden to Japan's Fuji Rock. His blue-eyed southern soul vocals ooze real emotion. And his top-line songwriting chops have crafted profound, honest, and heartfelt songs that will keep you singing, dancing, and feeling like the song was written about you. Jamie McLean Band creates a musical gumbo that incorporates New Orleans soul, middle Americana roots, Delta blues, and New York City swagger.
Tickets
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7:30 PM, November 15 |
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Gonzalo P. Biedma, guitar Skaneateles Library Guitar Series
Price: Free Skaneateles Library
49 E. Genesee St.,
Skaneateles
Gonzalo Peñalosa Biedma (Seville, 2002) began studying guitar at the age of five with his father, José Antonio Peñalosa. He later received instruction from Serafín Arriaza, Miguel Arriaza, Lola Montes, María Esther Guzmán, and Álvaro Toscano. He completed his studies at the Francisco Guerrero Professional Conservatory of Music in Seville, graduating in 2019 with the Honorary End-of-Studies Award. In 2018, he was granted the Academic and Personal Achievement Award by the City Council of Seville. Most recently, he graduated with Highest Honors and the Extraordinary Award from the Conservatory of the Balearic Islands, where he worked under the guidance of Pedro Mateo.
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7:30 PM, November 15 |
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Masterworks Series: Elgar's Enigma Variations Syracuse Orchestra (formerly Symphoria) José-Luis Novo, conductor Featuring Aaron Wunsch and Giancarlo Llerena, pianists
Crouse Hinds Concert Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
Saint-Saens Carnival of the Animals Liszt Totentanz Tan Dun Secret of Wind and Birds Elgar Enigma Variations
Tickets
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Theater |
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7:30 PM, November 15 |
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Lizzie Borden Took an Axe Covey Theatre Company Garrett Heater, director
Hosmer Auditorium, Everson Museum
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The brutal 1892 double homicide of Fall River, MA, mill owner Andrew Borden and his second wife Abby shocked Victorian Americans. Suspicion quickly fell on Andrew's daughter Lizzie, resulting in a sensationalized trial and Lizzie's eventual acquittal. The most historically accurate play on the subject, Lizzie Borden Took an Axe, by Garrett Heater brings court transcripts and testimony of the horrific murders to dramatic life. Having inaugurated the company in 2010, Lizzie ... celebrates 15 years of Covey Theater in Syracuse with this brand new production.
Tickets
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8:00 PM, November 15 |
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Opening: Antigonick Syracuse University Drama Department Matthew Winning and Erica Murphy, director
Storch Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Canadian poet Anne Carson's stunning translation revives and boldly reworks Sophokles' tragic meditation on tyranny and civil disobedience.
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Sunday, November 16, 2025
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Art |
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 16 |
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Patterns of Resistance Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
In the early 1970s, the Pattern & Decoration Movement emerged as an antidote to the vice grip in which abstraction had held American art since the 1950s. Artists like Valerie Jaudon, Joyce Kozloff, and Miriam Shapiro began juxtaposing colors and patterns that critics and artists alike had previously dismissed as feminine to powerful effect. Simultaneously, other feminist artists like Lynda Benglis were consciously subverting clay's associations as a masculine and/or craft medium. As the '70s played out, a generation of artists like Andrea Gill, Nancy Selvin, and Betty Woodman did not just embrace the decorative strategies of the Pattern & Decoration Movement, they also sought to place a feminist spin on their work. As ceramics become more common in a fine art context, hierarchies surrounding different materials faded, giving artists the ability to experiment and construct narrative and meaning through pattern. Long denigrated as "decorative" and closely associated with domesticity, patterns are now an integral part of the language of contemporary art.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 16 |
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Lessons in Geometry Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Artists have obsessed over the relationship between mathematics and art for millennia. As artists turned toward abstraction in the early 20th century, Europeans like Piet Mondrian used geometry to create a set of rules and parameters that guided their creative process. Meanwhile, American artists began developing their own styles and movements—particularly Abstract Expressionism, which was typified by bold, quickly executed brushwork, drips, and splashes. In the mid-20th century in the United States, artists laid the groundwork for Geometric Abstraction as a more cerebral alternative to the often macho flamboyance of Abstract Expressionism. Over the ensuing decades, artists used geometry to produce abstract works that ranged from the dazzling Op Art of Victor Vasarely to the restrained Minimalism of Sol LeWitt. "Lessons in Geometry" traces the evolution of hard-edged abstraction in the United States as artists sought to use pure geometric forms to create works with balance, harmony, and order. For these artists, shape, line, and color took precedence over representational compositions. The Everson's collection reflects the wildly varied ways that artists have used geometry to serve their personal expression, from the analytical formulations of Robert Swain to the shaped canvases of Harmony Hammond and the spatial illusions of Tony King.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 16 |
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Jake Troyli: Open Season Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Jake Troyli's works address the commodification of Black and Brown bodies, confronting and exploring labor capitalism and sweat equity as a demonstration of value. Troyli also injects his paintings with a sense of humor and absurdity through the inclusion of his own self-portrait. His avatar populates the works in "Open Season," where Troyli is both the hunter and the hunted as he participates in a variety of physical activities. As a former Division I basketball player, Troyli has a potent understanding of how athletes in America, particularly athletes of color, are simultaneously celebrated and criticized.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 16 |
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Joyce Kozloff: Contested Territories, 1983-2023 Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
For more than four decades, Joyce Kozloff has explored how the entanglements of geography, history, and power influence the visual language of maps. "Contested Territories" presents a selection of Kozloff's works that uncover how maps shape our understanding of the world—not as neutral tools, but as instruments of influence, ideology, and control. Kozloff's wide range of sources include historical maps, classroom wall maps, atlases, globes, and even satellite imagery from Google Maps. Her dense and colorful works often layer these materials with hand-painted details, collage, and intricate ornamentation. By combining sources that span centuries—from Renaissance celestial charts to contemporary digital mapping—she exposes how maps carry the legacies of empire, conflict, and shifting territorial claims. A founding figure in the Pattern and Decoration movement, Kozloff combines meticulous craftsmanship with political critique. Her works are labor-intensive, involving the detailed process of painting, drawing, and collaging over cartographic surfaces. The resulting richly textured visual field invites viewers to look closely—and to question the conquest, division, and erasure found beneath the official surface narrative. Whether reimagining educational globes or deconstructing colonial-era charts, Kozloff transforms maps from static documents into contested, dynamic spaces. Her work encourages viewers to reconsider how borders are drawn as well as how art can reclaim such boundaries as sites of resistance, memory, and possibility.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 16 |
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Laurent Craste: Iconoclasts Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
"Iconoclasts" marks the American museum debut for French-born Canadian ceramist Laurent Craste. Over the past decade, Craste has committed a wide range of indignities and abuse against his ornate vases and urns, including pummeling them with baseball bats and crowbars and piercing them with arrows. Despite the violence that runs through his work, Craste has a great passion for historical porcelain. Working with porcelain allows Craste to explore the prestige and power of upper-class society, but also inequality and the strain that is placed on working people. The anthropomorphic nature of Craste's vases echoes the human body, making it no surprise that people feel strong emotions when seeing a helpless vase struck by a baseball bat. Triggering these strong emotions in his audience allows Craste to connect on a deeper level as he asks questions about class, money, and power.
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11:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 16 |
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Everything Nice: Sasha Phyars-Burgess Light Work Gallery
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Sasha Phyars-Burgess's photographic project "Everything Nice" traces her family history through Portugal, the Dominican Republic, Florida, and Louisiana, following the paths of sugarcane farmed on colonial plantations and the transatlantic slave trade in relation to her ancestors. The photographs are taken in various locations: Madeira, Portugal, the Dominican Republic, Florida, and Louisiana. The pictures provide clues and details that are layered into a larger story. Looking back at history and locating the present, Phyars-Burgess is thinking through the idea that we are all living in a history, whether it is acknowledged or not. Once acknowledged, and if we allow ourselves to live with the past, with choices made by and for others, we can access a wider view of the present day.
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11:00 AM - 6:00 PM, November 16 |
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Tough Skin, Soft Ribs Light Work Gallery
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Light Work presents "Tough Skin, Soft Ribs," a selection of photographs from our collection by Marcus Xavier Chormicle, Jeremy Dennis, Amy Elkins, Tarrah Krajnak, Shelley Niro, Wendy Red Star, Pamela Shields, Hulleah Tsinhnahjinnie, Kathy Vargas, and Cristina Velásquez. This exhibition is curated by Cali M. Banks, who manages communications and outreach at Light Work. Resistant to 19th-century staged portraits of Indigenous people and the posed photographic work of Edward S. Curtis, the chosen artists confront colonial frameworks of Northern, Central, and Southern Indigeneity. This grouping of artists points back to the Four Directions, a cultural foundation that honors a holistic view of our interconnectedness; a place where borders do not exist, and we can join together as relatives. Through spectacles of Indigenous tropes, satire, religious testaments, diasporic histories, and fantasy, these artists are unpacking stereotypes, forcing a reclamation of personal and collective identities.
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Back to list |
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12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, November 16 |
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Bhen Alan: Why Does My Adobo Taste Different? Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The fifth iteration of the Art Wall Project features textiles made by the Filipino-American artist Bhen Alan. Through the creation of a monumental banig, or a traditional Filipino handwoven mat made from plant fibers, Alan grapples with the traumas of immigration and explores how diasporic communities work to recover a lost idea of home.
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Back to list |
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12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, November 16 |
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“What If I Try This?”: Helen Frankenthaler in the 20th-Century Print Ecosystem Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
"What If I Try This?" explores how Helen Frankenthaler, the noted 20th-century abstract artist, collaborated with printmakers in print studios and workshops throughout her long career. By focusing on her works on paper, this exhibition considers how printshops are key nodes within the printmaking ecosystems, or sites where artists and printers simultaneously championed technical innovations and created community.
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Back to list |
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12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, November 16 |
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Human/Environment: 4,000 Years of Art Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Drawing on the museum's extensive collection that encompasses almost 45,000 historic and contemporary artworks made around the globe, this exhibition explores how humans have interacted with and shaped the environment in which they live. Thematic sections focus on plants, home, population centers, and human figures.
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Back to list |
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12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, November 16 |
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A Sense of Arrival: Kevin Adonis Browne Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
"A Sense of Arrival" brings together scholarship and artistic practice in a multimedia installation by Kevin Adonis Browne, professor of rhetoric and writing in the Department of Writing Studies in the College of Arts and Sciences. Browne's exhibition combines photographs, sculpture, and new writings that reflect a decades-long meditation on Caribbean blackness, being, and rhetorical expression.
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Music |
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1:00 PM, November 16 |
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Nachos & Blancos The 443 Social Club
The 443 Social Club
443 Burnet Ave.,
Syracuse
Join us for our once-a-month rockin' rhythm and roots par-tay at The 443! It's the best hang in town, and we can't think of a better way to spend Sunday afternoon than grooving to the tasty tunes of the mighty Los Blancos.
Tickets
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2:00 PM, November 16 |
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Clarinet Serenade Silverwood Clarinet Choir
Price: Free Fayetteville Free Library
300 Orchard St.,
Fayetteville
Join the Silverwood Clarinet Choir for an enchanting afternoon of music at Clarinet Serenade on World Clarinet Day — a celebration of the rich, expressive sound of the clarinet family. The program features beloved classics including Mozart's Eine Kleine Nachtmusik and Vivaldi's Concerto Grosso, beautifully arranged for clarinet choir. Contemporary works written specifically for the ensemble, such as Clarinet Moods, highlight the instrument's lyrical and dynamic range. Guest artist Allan Kolsky, principal clarinet of the Syracuse Orchestra, will perform an expressive clarinet solo by Ciesla and lead the choir as conductor. Ronald Caravan, retired professor from Syracuse University, will be featured on saxophone in the evocative Aeolian Song. The concert concludes with Autumn Leaves, setting the perfect tone for a beautiful evening of music and the colors of fall.
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4:00 PM, November 16 |
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Malmgren Concert Series: Fall Choral Concert Hendricks Chapel Setnor School of Music Choirs
Price: Free Hendricks Chapel
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Crouse Chorale arr. Cristian Grases La Paloma Vivaldi Esurientes implevit bonis from "Magnificat" RV 610 Britten Balulalow from "A Ceremony of Carols" arr. Kevin Johnson Children Go Where I Send Thee Gwyneth Walker I Will Be Earth Katerina Gimon Fire from "Elements" Concert Choir arr. Jester Hairston Elijah Rock Brahms O Schöne Nacht from "Vier Quartette" Susan Labarr Forever Gone arr. Shawn Kirchner Brightest and Best University Singers Zanaida Stewart Robles The Summit Is Nigh Edward Lu November Night (World Premiere) de Victoria Regina caeli laetare Howells selections from "Requiem" arr. Moses Hogan My Soul's Been Anchored in the Lord
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Theater |
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2:00 PM, November 16 |
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Antigonick Syracuse University Drama Department Matthew Winning and Erica Murphy, director
Storch Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Canadian poet Anne Carson's stunning translation revives and boldly reworks Sophokles' tragic meditation on tyranny and civil disobedience.
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Monday, November 17, 2025
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Art |
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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, November 17 |
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Emptiness: Works By Abisay Puentes Community Folk Art Center
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
A solo exhibition of 25 acrylic on canvas pieces. The exhibition will be on view, inviting art enthusiasts to immerse themselves in Puentes' interwoven tapestry of three inseparable languages — poetry, painting, and music. The exhibition will also feature an interactive video component that intertwines art and classical music. Far from being an occasional addition, this medium expands the experience Puentes has cultivated for years, offering the viewer another gateway into the symbolic and existential narrative that defines his work.
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10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, November 17 |
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Tough Skin, Soft Ribs Light Work Gallery
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Light Work presents "Tough Skin, Soft Ribs," a selection of photographs from our collection by Marcus Xavier Chormicle, Jeremy Dennis, Amy Elkins, Tarrah Krajnak, Shelley Niro, Wendy Red Star, Pamela Shields, Hulleah Tsinhnahjinnie, Kathy Vargas, and Cristina Velásquez. This exhibition is curated by Cali M. Banks, who manages communications and outreach at Light Work. Resistant to 19th-century staged portraits of Indigenous people and the posed photographic work of Edward S. Curtis, the chosen artists confront colonial frameworks of Northern, Central, and Southern Indigeneity. This grouping of artists points back to the Four Directions, a cultural foundation that honors a holistic view of our interconnectedness; a place where borders do not exist, and we can join together as relatives. Through spectacles of Indigenous tropes, satire, religious testaments, diasporic histories, and fantasy, these artists are unpacking stereotypes, forcing a reclamation of personal and collective identities.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, November 17 |
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Everything Nice: Sasha Phyars-Burgess Light Work Gallery
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Sasha Phyars-Burgess's photographic project "Everything Nice" traces her family history through Portugal, the Dominican Republic, Florida, and Louisiana, following the paths of sugarcane farmed on colonial plantations and the transatlantic slave trade in relation to her ancestors. The photographs are taken in various locations: Madeira, Portugal, the Dominican Republic, Florida, and Louisiana. The pictures provide clues and details that are layered into a larger story. Looking back at history and locating the present, Phyars-Burgess is thinking through the idea that we are all living in a history, whether it is acknowledged or not. Once acknowledged, and if we allow ourselves to live with the past, with choices made by and for others, we can access a wider view of the present day.
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 17 |
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Corpórea La Casita Cultural Center
La Casita Cultural Center
109 Otisco St.,
Syracuse
Corpórea is a showcase of powerful, large-scale works in mixed media, body maps created by a collaborative of local Latino artists, community members, SU faculty and students through a series of adult workshops that integrate the principles of Art Therapy. Facilitated by Syracuse University graduate student in Creative Art Therapy, Bennie Guzmán, the workshops explored themes of healing, identity, and embodiment, and the transformative power of creativity.
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Tuesday, November 18, 2025
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Art |
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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, November 18 |
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Emptiness: Works By Abisay Puentes Community Folk Art Center
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
A solo exhibition of 25 acrylic on canvas pieces. The exhibition will be on view, inviting art enthusiasts to immerse themselves in Puentes' interwoven tapestry of three inseparable languages — poetry, painting, and music. The exhibition will also feature an interactive video component that intertwines art and classical music. Far from being an occasional addition, this medium expands the experience Puentes has cultivated for years, offering the viewer another gateway into the symbolic and existential narrative that defines his work.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, November 18 |
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Everything Nice: Sasha Phyars-Burgess Light Work Gallery
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Sasha Phyars-Burgess's photographic project "Everything Nice" traces her family history through Portugal, the Dominican Republic, Florida, and Louisiana, following the paths of sugarcane farmed on colonial plantations and the transatlantic slave trade in relation to her ancestors. The photographs are taken in various locations: Madeira, Portugal, the Dominican Republic, Florida, and Louisiana. The pictures provide clues and details that are layered into a larger story. Looking back at history and locating the present, Phyars-Burgess is thinking through the idea that we are all living in a history, whether it is acknowledged or not. Once acknowledged, and if we allow ourselves to live with the past, with choices made by and for others, we can access a wider view of the present day.
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10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, November 18 |
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Tough Skin, Soft Ribs Light Work Gallery
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Light Work presents "Tough Skin, Soft Ribs," a selection of photographs from our collection by Marcus Xavier Chormicle, Jeremy Dennis, Amy Elkins, Tarrah Krajnak, Shelley Niro, Wendy Red Star, Pamela Shields, Hulleah Tsinhnahjinnie, Kathy Vargas, and Cristina Velásquez. This exhibition is curated by Cali M. Banks, who manages communications and outreach at Light Work. Resistant to 19th-century staged portraits of Indigenous people and the posed photographic work of Edward S. Curtis, the chosen artists confront colonial frameworks of Northern, Central, and Southern Indigeneity. This grouping of artists points back to the Four Directions, a cultural foundation that honors a holistic view of our interconnectedness; a place where borders do not exist, and we can join together as relatives. Through spectacles of Indigenous tropes, satire, religious testaments, diasporic histories, and fantasy, these artists are unpacking stereotypes, forcing a reclamation of personal and collective identities.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 18 |
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Bhen Alan: Why Does My Adobo Taste Different? Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The fifth iteration of the Art Wall Project features textiles made by the Filipino-American artist Bhen Alan. Through the creation of a monumental banig, or a traditional Filipino handwoven mat made from plant fibers, Alan grapples with the traumas of immigration and explores how diasporic communities work to recover a lost idea of home.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 18 |
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“What If I Try This?”: Helen Frankenthaler in the 20th-Century Print Ecosystem Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
"What If I Try This?" explores how Helen Frankenthaler, the noted 20th-century abstract artist, collaborated with printmakers in print studios and workshops throughout her long career. By focusing on her works on paper, this exhibition considers how printshops are key nodes within the printmaking ecosystems, or sites where artists and printers simultaneously championed technical innovations and created community.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 18 |
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A Sense of Arrival: Kevin Adonis Browne Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
"A Sense of Arrival" brings together scholarship and artistic practice in a multimedia installation by Kevin Adonis Browne, professor of rhetoric and writing in the Department of Writing Studies in the College of Arts and Sciences. Browne's exhibition combines photographs, sculpture, and new writings that reflect a decades-long meditation on Caribbean blackness, being, and rhetorical expression.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 18 |
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Human/Environment: 4,000 Years of Art Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Drawing on the museum's extensive collection that encompasses almost 45,000 historic and contemporary artworks made around the globe, this exhibition explores how humans have interacted with and shaped the environment in which they live. Thematic sections focus on plants, home, population centers, and human figures.
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Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 18 |
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Corpórea La Casita Cultural Center
La Casita Cultural Center
109 Otisco St.,
Syracuse
Corpórea is a showcase of powerful, large-scale works in mixed media, body maps created by a collaborative of local Latino artists, community members, SU faculty and students through a series of adult workshops that integrate the principles of Art Therapy. Facilitated by Syracuse University graduate student in Creative Art Therapy, Bennie Guzmán, the workshops explored themes of healing, identity, and embodiment, and the transformative power of creativity.
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Back to list |
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Wednesday, November 19, 2025
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Art |
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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, November 19 |
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Emptiness: Works By Abisay Puentes Community Folk Art Center
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
A solo exhibition of 25 acrylic on canvas pieces. The exhibition will be on view, inviting art enthusiasts to immerse themselves in Puentes' interwoven tapestry of three inseparable languages — poetry, painting, and music. The exhibition will also feature an interactive video component that intertwines art and classical music. Far from being an occasional addition, this medium expands the experience Puentes has cultivated for years, offering the viewer another gateway into the symbolic and existential narrative that defines his work.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, November 19 |
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Everything Nice: Sasha Phyars-Burgess Light Work Gallery
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Sasha Phyars-Burgess's photographic project "Everything Nice" traces her family history through Portugal, the Dominican Republic, Florida, and Louisiana, following the paths of sugarcane farmed on colonial plantations and the transatlantic slave trade in relation to her ancestors. The photographs are taken in various locations: Madeira, Portugal, the Dominican Republic, Florida, and Louisiana. The pictures provide clues and details that are layered into a larger story. Looking back at history and locating the present, Phyars-Burgess is thinking through the idea that we are all living in a history, whether it is acknowledged or not. Once acknowledged, and if we allow ourselves to live with the past, with choices made by and for others, we can access a wider view of the present day.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, November 19 |
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Tough Skin, Soft Ribs Light Work Gallery
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Light Work presents "Tough Skin, Soft Ribs," a selection of photographs from our collection by Marcus Xavier Chormicle, Jeremy Dennis, Amy Elkins, Tarrah Krajnak, Shelley Niro, Wendy Red Star, Pamela Shields, Hulleah Tsinhnahjinnie, Kathy Vargas, and Cristina Velásquez. This exhibition is curated by Cali M. Banks, who manages communications and outreach at Light Work. Resistant to 19th-century staged portraits of Indigenous people and the posed photographic work of Edward S. Curtis, the chosen artists confront colonial frameworks of Northern, Central, and Southern Indigeneity. This grouping of artists points back to the Four Directions, a cultural foundation that honors a holistic view of our interconnectedness; a place where borders do not exist, and we can join together as relatives. Through spectacles of Indigenous tropes, satire, religious testaments, diasporic histories, and fantasy, these artists are unpacking stereotypes, forcing a reclamation of personal and collective identities.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 19 |
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Bhen Alan: Why Does My Adobo Taste Different? Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The fifth iteration of the Art Wall Project features textiles made by the Filipino-American artist Bhen Alan. Through the creation of a monumental banig, or a traditional Filipino handwoven mat made from plant fibers, Alan grapples with the traumas of immigration and explores how diasporic communities work to recover a lost idea of home.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 19 |
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Human/Environment: 4,000 Years of Art Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Drawing on the museum's extensive collection that encompasses almost 45,000 historic and contemporary artworks made around the globe, this exhibition explores how humans have interacted with and shaped the environment in which they live. Thematic sections focus on plants, home, population centers, and human figures.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 19 |
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A Sense of Arrival: Kevin Adonis Browne Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
"A Sense of Arrival" brings together scholarship and artistic practice in a multimedia installation by Kevin Adonis Browne, professor of rhetoric and writing in the Department of Writing Studies in the College of Arts and Sciences. Browne's exhibition combines photographs, sculpture, and new writings that reflect a decades-long meditation on Caribbean blackness, being, and rhetorical expression.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 19 |
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“What If I Try This?”: Helen Frankenthaler in the 20th-Century Print Ecosystem Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
"What If I Try This?" explores how Helen Frankenthaler, the noted 20th-century abstract artist, collaborated with printmakers in print studios and workshops throughout her long career. By focusing on her works on paper, this exhibition considers how printshops are key nodes within the printmaking ecosystems, or sites where artists and printers simultaneously championed technical innovations and created community.
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Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 19 |
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Joyce Kozloff: Contested Territories, 1983-2023 Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
For more than four decades, Joyce Kozloff has explored how the entanglements of geography, history, and power influence the visual language of maps. "Contested Territories" presents a selection of Kozloff's works that uncover how maps shape our understanding of the world—not as neutral tools, but as instruments of influence, ideology, and control. Kozloff's wide range of sources include historical maps, classroom wall maps, atlases, globes, and even satellite imagery from Google Maps. Her dense and colorful works often layer these materials with hand-painted details, collage, and intricate ornamentation. By combining sources that span centuries—from Renaissance celestial charts to contemporary digital mapping—she exposes how maps carry the legacies of empire, conflict, and shifting territorial claims. A founding figure in the Pattern and Decoration movement, Kozloff combines meticulous craftsmanship with political critique. Her works are labor-intensive, involving the detailed process of painting, drawing, and collaging over cartographic surfaces. The resulting richly textured visual field invites viewers to look closely—and to question the conquest, division, and erasure found beneath the official surface narrative. Whether reimagining educational globes or deconstructing colonial-era charts, Kozloff transforms maps from static documents into contested, dynamic spaces. Her work encourages viewers to reconsider how borders are drawn as well as how art can reclaim such boundaries as sites of resistance, memory, and possibility.
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Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 19 |
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Jake Troyli: Open Season Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Jake Troyli's works address the commodification of Black and Brown bodies, confronting and exploring labor capitalism and sweat equity as a demonstration of value. Troyli also injects his paintings with a sense of humor and absurdity through the inclusion of his own self-portrait. His avatar populates the works in "Open Season," where Troyli is both the hunter and the hunted as he participates in a variety of physical activities. As a former Division I basketball player, Troyli has a potent understanding of how athletes in America, particularly athletes of color, are simultaneously celebrated and criticized.
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Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 19 |
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Lessons in Geometry Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Artists have obsessed over the relationship between mathematics and art for millennia. As artists turned toward abstraction in the early 20th century, Europeans like Piet Mondrian used geometry to create a set of rules and parameters that guided their creative process. Meanwhile, American artists began developing their own styles and movements—particularly Abstract Expressionism, which was typified by bold, quickly executed brushwork, drips, and splashes. In the mid-20th century in the United States, artists laid the groundwork for Geometric Abstraction as a more cerebral alternative to the often macho flamboyance of Abstract Expressionism. Over the ensuing decades, artists used geometry to produce abstract works that ranged from the dazzling Op Art of Victor Vasarely to the restrained Minimalism of Sol LeWitt. "Lessons in Geometry" traces the evolution of hard-edged abstraction in the United States as artists sought to use pure geometric forms to create works with balance, harmony, and order. For these artists, shape, line, and color took precedence over representational compositions. The Everson's collection reflects the wildly varied ways that artists have used geometry to serve their personal expression, from the analytical formulations of Robert Swain to the shaped canvases of Harmony Hammond and the spatial illusions of Tony King.
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Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 19 |
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Patterns of Resistance Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
In the early 1970s, the Pattern & Decoration Movement emerged as an antidote to the vice grip in which abstraction had held American art since the 1950s. Artists like Valerie Jaudon, Joyce Kozloff, and Miriam Shapiro began juxtaposing colors and patterns that critics and artists alike had previously dismissed as feminine to powerful effect. Simultaneously, other feminist artists like Lynda Benglis were consciously subverting clay's associations as a masculine and/or craft medium. As the '70s played out, a generation of artists like Andrea Gill, Nancy Selvin, and Betty Woodman did not just embrace the decorative strategies of the Pattern & Decoration Movement, they also sought to place a feminist spin on their work. As ceramics become more common in a fine art context, hierarchies surrounding different materials faded, giving artists the ability to experiment and construct narrative and meaning through pattern. Long denigrated as "decorative" and closely associated with domesticity, patterns are now an integral part of the language of contemporary art.
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Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 19 |
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Laurent Craste: Iconoclasts Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
"Iconoclasts" marks the American museum debut for French-born Canadian ceramist Laurent Craste. Over the past decade, Craste has committed a wide range of indignities and abuse against his ornate vases and urns, including pummeling them with baseball bats and crowbars and piercing them with arrows. Despite the violence that runs through his work, Craste has a great passion for historical porcelain. Working with porcelain allows Craste to explore the prestige and power of upper-class society, but also inequality and the strain that is placed on working people. The anthropomorphic nature of Craste's vases echoes the human body, making it no surprise that people feel strong emotions when seeing a helpless vase struck by a baseball bat. Triggering these strong emotions in his audience allows Craste to connect on a deeper level as he asks questions about class, money, and power.
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Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 19 |
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Corpórea La Casita Cultural Center
La Casita Cultural Center
109 Otisco St.,
Syracuse
Corpórea is a showcase of powerful, large-scale works in mixed media, body maps created by a collaborative of local Latino artists, community members, SU faculty and students through a series of adult workshops that integrate the principles of Art Therapy. Facilitated by Syracuse University graduate student in Creative Art Therapy, Bennie Guzmán, the workshops explored themes of healing, identity, and embodiment, and the transformative power of creativity.
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Back to list |
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2:00 PM - 6:00 PM, November 19 |
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Reclaiming Our Collective Inheritance: A Palestinian Diaspora Collection ArtRage Gallery
Price: Free ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave.,
Syracuse
The Palestinian thobe is more than an embroidered garment — it is a living archive. For Palestinians in the diaspora, these intricately stitched dresses are tangible connections to a homeland many have never seen, yet fiercely carry within them. Each motif tells a story — of identity, ancestral village, and unbroken resilience. Tragically, many thobes have been lost to time, war, and dispossession — from heirloom dresses smuggled out of Palestine to stolen thobes rediscovered in antique markets, their narratives preserved only in the whispers of fading thread. This exhibit, "Reclaiming Our Collective Inheritance," is both a memorial and a call to action: to rescue, preserve, remember, and honor the hands that embroidered them. More than fabric, these thobes weave memory and return into every stitch. This is more than an exhibit — it is a reclamation. An act of cultural preservation which ensures that this art form, and the Palestinian narrative itself, remains alive for future generations.
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Back to list |
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Theater |
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8:00 PM, November 19 |
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Antigonick Syracuse University Drama Department Matthew Winning and Erica Murphy, director
Storch Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Canadian poet Anne Carson's stunning translation revives and boldly reworks Sophokles' tragic meditation on tyranny and civil disobedience.
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Back to list |
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Thursday, November 20, 2025
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Art |
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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, November 20 |
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Emptiness: Works By Abisay Puentes Community Folk Art Center
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
A solo exhibition of 25 acrylic on canvas pieces. The exhibition will be on view, inviting art enthusiasts to immerse themselves in Puentes' interwoven tapestry of three inseparable languages — poetry, painting, and music. The exhibition will also feature an interactive video component that intertwines art and classical music. Far from being an occasional addition, this medium expands the experience Puentes has cultivated for years, offering the viewer another gateway into the symbolic and existential narrative that defines his work.
|
Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, November 20 |
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Tough Skin, Soft Ribs Light Work Gallery
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Light Work presents "Tough Skin, Soft Ribs," a selection of photographs from our collection by Marcus Xavier Chormicle, Jeremy Dennis, Amy Elkins, Tarrah Krajnak, Shelley Niro, Wendy Red Star, Pamela Shields, Hulleah Tsinhnahjinnie, Kathy Vargas, and Cristina Velásquez. This exhibition is curated by Cali M. Banks, who manages communications and outreach at Light Work. Resistant to 19th-century staged portraits of Indigenous people and the posed photographic work of Edward S. Curtis, the chosen artists confront colonial frameworks of Northern, Central, and Southern Indigeneity. This grouping of artists points back to the Four Directions, a cultural foundation that honors a holistic view of our interconnectedness; a place where borders do not exist, and we can join together as relatives. Through spectacles of Indigenous tropes, satire, religious testaments, diasporic histories, and fantasy, these artists are unpacking stereotypes, forcing a reclamation of personal and collective identities.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 9:00 PM, November 20 |
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Everything Nice: Sasha Phyars-Burgess Light Work Gallery
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Sasha Phyars-Burgess's photographic project "Everything Nice" traces her family history through Portugal, the Dominican Republic, Florida, and Louisiana, following the paths of sugarcane farmed on colonial plantations and the transatlantic slave trade in relation to her ancestors. The photographs are taken in various locations: Madeira, Portugal, the Dominican Republic, Florida, and Louisiana. The pictures provide clues and details that are layered into a larger story. Looking back at history and locating the present, Phyars-Burgess is thinking through the idea that we are all living in a history, whether it is acknowledged or not. Once acknowledged, and if we allow ourselves to live with the past, with choices made by and for others, we can access a wider view of the present day.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, November 20 |
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Bhen Alan: Why Does My Adobo Taste Different? Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The fifth iteration of the Art Wall Project features textiles made by the Filipino-American artist Bhen Alan. Through the creation of a monumental banig, or a traditional Filipino handwoven mat made from plant fibers, Alan grapples with the traumas of immigration and explores how diasporic communities work to recover a lost idea of home.
|
Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, November 20 |
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“What If I Try This?”: Helen Frankenthaler in the 20th-Century Print Ecosystem Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
"What If I Try This?" explores how Helen Frankenthaler, the noted 20th-century abstract artist, collaborated with printmakers in print studios and workshops throughout her long career. By focusing on her works on paper, this exhibition considers how printshops are key nodes within the printmaking ecosystems, or sites where artists and printers simultaneously championed technical innovations and created community.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, November 20 |
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A Sense of Arrival: Kevin Adonis Browne Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
"A Sense of Arrival" brings together scholarship and artistic practice in a multimedia installation by Kevin Adonis Browne, professor of rhetoric and writing in the Department of Writing Studies in the College of Arts and Sciences. Browne's exhibition combines photographs, sculpture, and new writings that reflect a decades-long meditation on Caribbean blackness, being, and rhetorical expression.
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Back to list |
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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, November 20 |
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Human/Environment: 4,000 Years of Art Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Drawing on the museum's extensive collection that encompasses almost 45,000 historic and contemporary artworks made around the globe, this exhibition explores how humans have interacted with and shaped the environment in which they live. Thematic sections focus on plants, home, population centers, and human figures.
|
Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, November 20 |
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Patterns of Resistance Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
In the early 1970s, the Pattern & Decoration Movement emerged as an antidote to the vice grip in which abstraction had held American art since the 1950s. Artists like Valerie Jaudon, Joyce Kozloff, and Miriam Shapiro began juxtaposing colors and patterns that critics and artists alike had previously dismissed as feminine to powerful effect. Simultaneously, other feminist artists like Lynda Benglis were consciously subverting clay's associations as a masculine and/or craft medium. As the '70s played out, a generation of artists like Andrea Gill, Nancy Selvin, and Betty Woodman did not just embrace the decorative strategies of the Pattern & Decoration Movement, they also sought to place a feminist spin on their work. As ceramics become more common in a fine art context, hierarchies surrounding different materials faded, giving artists the ability to experiment and construct narrative and meaning through pattern. Long denigrated as "decorative" and closely associated with domesticity, patterns are now an integral part of the language of contemporary art.
|
Back to list |
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|
11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, November 20 |
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|
Lessons in Geometry Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Artists have obsessed over the relationship between mathematics and art for millennia. As artists turned toward abstraction in the early 20th century, Europeans like Piet Mondrian used geometry to create a set of rules and parameters that guided their creative process. Meanwhile, American artists began developing their own styles and movements—particularly Abstract Expressionism, which was typified by bold, quickly executed brushwork, drips, and splashes. In the mid-20th century in the United States, artists laid the groundwork for Geometric Abstraction as a more cerebral alternative to the often macho flamboyance of Abstract Expressionism. Over the ensuing decades, artists used geometry to produce abstract works that ranged from the dazzling Op Art of Victor Vasarely to the restrained Minimalism of Sol LeWitt. "Lessons in Geometry" traces the evolution of hard-edged abstraction in the United States as artists sought to use pure geometric forms to create works with balance, harmony, and order. For these artists, shape, line, and color took precedence over representational compositions. The Everson's collection reflects the wildly varied ways that artists have used geometry to serve their personal expression, from the analytical formulations of Robert Swain to the shaped canvases of Harmony Hammond and the spatial illusions of Tony King.
|
Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, November 20 |
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Jake Troyli: Open Season Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Jake Troyli's works address the commodification of Black and Brown bodies, confronting and exploring labor capitalism and sweat equity as a demonstration of value. Troyli also injects his paintings with a sense of humor and absurdity through the inclusion of his own self-portrait. His avatar populates the works in "Open Season," where Troyli is both the hunter and the hunted as he participates in a variety of physical activities. As a former Division I basketball player, Troyli has a potent understanding of how athletes in America, particularly athletes of color, are simultaneously celebrated and criticized.
|
Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, November 20 |
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Joyce Kozloff: Contested Territories, 1983-2023 Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
For more than four decades, Joyce Kozloff has explored how the entanglements of geography, history, and power influence the visual language of maps. "Contested Territories" presents a selection of Kozloff's works that uncover how maps shape our understanding of the world—not as neutral tools, but as instruments of influence, ideology, and control. Kozloff's wide range of sources include historical maps, classroom wall maps, atlases, globes, and even satellite imagery from Google Maps. Her dense and colorful works often layer these materials with hand-painted details, collage, and intricate ornamentation. By combining sources that span centuries—from Renaissance celestial charts to contemporary digital mapping—she exposes how maps carry the legacies of empire, conflict, and shifting territorial claims. A founding figure in the Pattern and Decoration movement, Kozloff combines meticulous craftsmanship with political critique. Her works are labor-intensive, involving the detailed process of painting, drawing, and collaging over cartographic surfaces. The resulting richly textured visual field invites viewers to look closely—and to question the conquest, division, and erasure found beneath the official surface narrative. Whether reimagining educational globes or deconstructing colonial-era charts, Kozloff transforms maps from static documents into contested, dynamic spaces. Her work encourages viewers to reconsider how borders are drawn as well as how art can reclaim such boundaries as sites of resistance, memory, and possibility.
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Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, November 20 |
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Laurent Craste: Iconoclasts Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
"Iconoclasts" marks the American museum debut for French-born Canadian ceramist Laurent Craste. Over the past decade, Craste has committed a wide range of indignities and abuse against his ornate vases and urns, including pummeling them with baseball bats and crowbars and piercing them with arrows. Despite the violence that runs through his work, Craste has a great passion for historical porcelain. Working with porcelain allows Craste to explore the prestige and power of upper-class society, but also inequality and the strain that is placed on working people. The anthropomorphic nature of Craste's vases echoes the human body, making it no surprise that people feel strong emotions when seeing a helpless vase struck by a baseball bat. Triggering these strong emotions in his audience allows Craste to connect on a deeper level as he asks questions about class, money, and power.
|
Back to list |
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 20 |
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Corpórea La Casita Cultural Center
La Casita Cultural Center
109 Otisco St.,
Syracuse
Corpórea is a showcase of powerful, large-scale works in mixed media, body maps created by a collaborative of local Latino artists, community members, SU faculty and students through a series of adult workshops that integrate the principles of Art Therapy. Facilitated by Syracuse University graduate student in Creative Art Therapy, Bennie Guzmán, the workshops explored themes of healing, identity, and embodiment, and the transformative power of creativity.
|
Back to list |
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2:00 PM - 6:00 PM, November 20 |
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Reclaiming Our Collective Inheritance: A Palestinian Diaspora Collection ArtRage Gallery
Price: Free ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave.,
Syracuse
The Palestinian thobe is more than an embroidered garment — it is a living archive. For Palestinians in the diaspora, these intricately stitched dresses are tangible connections to a homeland many have never seen, yet fiercely carry within them. Each motif tells a story — of identity, ancestral village, and unbroken resilience. Tragically, many thobes have been lost to time, war, and dispossession — from heirloom dresses smuggled out of Palestine to stolen thobes rediscovered in antique markets, their narratives preserved only in the whispers of fading thread. This exhibit, "Reclaiming Our Collective Inheritance," is both a memorial and a call to action: to rescue, preserve, remember, and honor the hands that embroidered them. More than fabric, these thobes weave memory and return into every stitch. This is more than an exhibit — it is a reclamation. An act of cultural preservation which ensures that this art form, and the Palestinian narrative itself, remains alive for future generations.
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Back to list |
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5:15 PM - 11:00 PM, November 20 |
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The Portal's Keeper Urban Video Project
Price: Free Everson Museum of Art Plaza
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Media artists LaJuné McMillian and Manuel Molina Martagon worked with local, community-engaged creatives Kofi Antwi, Clove Flores, Sofia Gutierrez, and Martikah Williams. Together, they discussed their practices and their visions for a liberated future. The artists asked them to embody their answers not only through words, but through movement as well. "The Portal's Keeper" realizes those visions through the technological "portal" of a popular game engine better known for first-person shooter and battle royale MMO games. Here, the artists use this technology not to realistically simulate violence, but instead as a means to represent what liberation might look like. Screening, projected on the museum wall, begins at dusk.
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Back to list |
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Lecture |
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6:00 PM - 7:00 PM, November 20 |
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Gallery Talk with Artist Jake Troyli Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Join artist Jake Troyli for a special gallery talk in celebration of the featured exhibition "Jake Troyli: Open Season." Fusing the technical rigor of Renaissance painting with the absurdity of modern spectacle, Troyli constructs surreal, narrative-driven worlds that interrogate the performance of identity and the commodification of the Black/Brown body. A former Division I basketball player, Troyli draws on personal experience navigating systems where physicality becomes currency and selfhood a staged performance. His avatars-elongated, costumed, and eerily composed-inhabit theatrical spaces that mimic battlegrounds, courtrooms, and community theater stages, blurring the line between satire and sincerity. In this newest work, Troyli expands his cast of figures to complicate binaries of hero and villain, participant and prop, inviting viewers into a charged meditation on labor, agency, and the exhaustion of endless performance. Open discussion and light refreshments to follow.
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Music |
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7:00 PM, November 20 |
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Loren & LJ Barrigar The 443 Social Club
The 443 Social Club
443 Burnet Ave.,
Syracuse
Loren Barrigar started playing guitar when he was only four years old, and by the time he was six, played the Chet Atkins hit "Yackety Axe" in front of thousands of country music fans at the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville. He went on to study with Jimmy Atkins (Chet's brother) which led to a touring career with his family band from Nashville to Las Vegas. Since settling down in Central New York, he has been in constant demand as a studio musician. These days, his talented son LJ joins him on stage, following in the family business.
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Theater |
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7:00 PM, November 20 |
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The Dangerous Variety Acme Mystery Company
Spaghetti Warehouse
689 N. Clinton St.,
Syracuse
Welcome to 1961 and Club Polska where tonight local radio station WSKI will be recording their popular variety show The Hunky Dory Hour! You plan to laugh it up like always but the manager of the sausage factory where you work has mysteriously died and rumors flying around Kielbasi Park say it might be the notorious Pierogi Killer! But they're just rumors, right? You're not worried. The Impressive Sausage Company is sending their best man and if you can't trust a corporate fixer, who can you trust?
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8:00 PM, November 20 |
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Antigonick Syracuse University Drama Department Matthew Winning and Erica Murphy, director
Storch Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Canadian poet Anne Carson's stunning translation revives and boldly reworks Sophokles' tragic meditation on tyranny and civil disobedience.
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Friday, November 21, 2025
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Art |
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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, November 21 |
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Emptiness: Works By Abisay Puentes Community Folk Art Center
Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
A solo exhibition of 25 acrylic on canvas pieces. The exhibition will be on view, inviting art enthusiasts to immerse themselves in Puentes' interwoven tapestry of three inseparable languages — poetry, painting, and music. The exhibition will also feature an interactive video component that intertwines art and classical music. Far from being an occasional addition, this medium expands the experience Puentes has cultivated for years, offering the viewer another gateway into the symbolic and existential narrative that defines his work.
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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 21 |
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40th Annual Gingerbread Gallery Erie Canal Museum
Erie Canal Museum
318 Erie Blvd. E.,
Syracuse
Step into a winter wonderland at the 40th Annual Gingerbread Gallery, a cherished holiday tradition. Dozens of gingerbread creations crafted by local bakers will be on display in the 19th-century storefront windows.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 21 |
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Tough Skin, Soft Ribs Light Work Gallery
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Light Work presents "Tough Skin, Soft Ribs," a selection of photographs from our collection by Marcus Xavier Chormicle, Jeremy Dennis, Amy Elkins, Tarrah Krajnak, Shelley Niro, Wendy Red Star, Pamela Shields, Hulleah Tsinhnahjinnie, Kathy Vargas, and Cristina Velásquez. This exhibition is curated by Cali M. Banks, who manages communications and outreach at Light Work. Resistant to 19th-century staged portraits of Indigenous people and the posed photographic work of Edward S. Curtis, the chosen artists confront colonial frameworks of Northern, Central, and Southern Indigeneity. This grouping of artists points back to the Four Directions, a cultural foundation that honors a holistic view of our interconnectedness; a place where borders do not exist, and we can join together as relatives. Through spectacles of Indigenous tropes, satire, religious testaments, diasporic histories, and fantasy, these artists are unpacking stereotypes, forcing a reclamation of personal and collective identities.
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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 21 |
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Everything Nice: Sasha Phyars-Burgess Light Work Gallery
Light Work Gallery
316 Waverly Ave., Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Sasha Phyars-Burgess's photographic project "Everything Nice" traces her family history through Portugal, the Dominican Republic, Florida, and Louisiana, following the paths of sugarcane farmed on colonial plantations and the transatlantic slave trade in relation to her ancestors. The photographs are taken in various locations: Madeira, Portugal, the Dominican Republic, Florida, and Louisiana. The pictures provide clues and details that are layered into a larger story. Looking back at history and locating the present, Phyars-Burgess is thinking through the idea that we are all living in a history, whether it is acknowledged or not. Once acknowledged, and if we allow ourselves to live with the past, with choices made by and for others, we can access a wider view of the present day.
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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 21 |
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Bhen Alan: Why Does My Adobo Taste Different? Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
The fifth iteration of the Art Wall Project features textiles made by the Filipino-American artist Bhen Alan. Through the creation of a monumental banig, or a traditional Filipino handwoven mat made from plant fibers, Alan grapples with the traumas of immigration and explores how diasporic communities work to recover a lost idea of home.
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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 21 |
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“What If I Try This?”: Helen Frankenthaler in the 20th-Century Print Ecosystem Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
"What If I Try This?" explores how Helen Frankenthaler, the noted 20th-century abstract artist, collaborated with printmakers in print studios and workshops throughout her long career. By focusing on her works on paper, this exhibition considers how printshops are key nodes within the printmaking ecosystems, or sites where artists and printers simultaneously championed technical innovations and created community.
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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 21 |
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Human/Environment: 4,000 Years of Art Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
Drawing on the museum's extensive collection that encompasses almost 45,000 historic and contemporary artworks made around the globe, this exhibition explores how humans have interacted with and shaped the environment in which they live. Thematic sections focus on plants, home, population centers, and human figures.
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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 21 |
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A Sense of Arrival: Kevin Adonis Browne Syracuse University Art Museum
Price: Free Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University,
Syracuse
"A Sense of Arrival" brings together scholarship and artistic practice in a multimedia installation by Kevin Adonis Browne, professor of rhetoric and writing in the Department of Writing Studies in the College of Arts and Sciences. Browne's exhibition combines photographs, sculpture, and new writings that reflect a decades-long meditation on Caribbean blackness, being, and rhetorical expression.
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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 21 |
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Joyce Kozloff: Contested Territories, 1983-2023 Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
For more than four decades, Joyce Kozloff has explored how the entanglements of geography, history, and power influence the visual language of maps. "Contested Territories" presents a selection of Kozloff's works that uncover how maps shape our understanding of the world—not as neutral tools, but as instruments of influence, ideology, and control. Kozloff's wide range of sources include historical maps, classroom wall maps, atlases, globes, and even satellite imagery from Google Maps. Her dense and colorful works often layer these materials with hand-painted details, collage, and intricate ornamentation. By combining sources that span centuries—from Renaissance celestial charts to contemporary digital mapping—she exposes how maps carry the legacies of empire, conflict, and shifting territorial claims. A founding figure in the Pattern and Decoration movement, Kozloff combines meticulous craftsmanship with political critique. Her works are labor-intensive, involving the detailed process of painting, drawing, and collaging over cartographic surfaces. The resulting richly textured visual field invites viewers to look closely—and to question the conquest, division, and erasure found beneath the official surface narrative. Whether reimagining educational globes or deconstructing colonial-era charts, Kozloff transforms maps from static documents into contested, dynamic spaces. Her work encourages viewers to reconsider how borders are drawn as well as how art can reclaim such boundaries as sites of resistance, memory, and possibility.
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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 21 |
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Jake Troyli: Open Season Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Jake Troyli's works address the commodification of Black and Brown bodies, confronting and exploring labor capitalism and sweat equity as a demonstration of value. Troyli also injects his paintings with a sense of humor and absurdity through the inclusion of his own self-portrait. His avatar populates the works in "Open Season," where Troyli is both the hunter and the hunted as he participates in a variety of physical activities. As a former Division I basketball player, Troyli has a potent understanding of how athletes in America, particularly athletes of color, are simultaneously celebrated and criticized.
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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 21 |
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Lessons in Geometry Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Artists have obsessed over the relationship between mathematics and art for millennia. As artists turned toward abstraction in the early 20th century, Europeans like Piet Mondrian used geometry to create a set of rules and parameters that guided their creative process. Meanwhile, American artists began developing their own styles and movements—particularly Abstract Expressionism, which was typified by bold, quickly executed brushwork, drips, and splashes. In the mid-20th century in the United States, artists laid the groundwork for Geometric Abstraction as a more cerebral alternative to the often macho flamboyance of Abstract Expressionism. Over the ensuing decades, artists used geometry to produce abstract works that ranged from the dazzling Op Art of Victor Vasarely to the restrained Minimalism of Sol LeWitt. "Lessons in Geometry" traces the evolution of hard-edged abstraction in the United States as artists sought to use pure geometric forms to create works with balance, harmony, and order. For these artists, shape, line, and color took precedence over representational compositions. The Everson's collection reflects the wildly varied ways that artists have used geometry to serve their personal expression, from the analytical formulations of Robert Swain to the shaped canvases of Harmony Hammond and the spatial illusions of Tony King.
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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 21 |
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Patterns of Resistance Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
In the early 1970s, the Pattern & Decoration Movement emerged as an antidote to the vice grip in which abstraction had held American art since the 1950s. Artists like Valerie Jaudon, Joyce Kozloff, and Miriam Shapiro began juxtaposing colors and patterns that critics and artists alike had previously dismissed as feminine to powerful effect. Simultaneously, other feminist artists like Lynda Benglis were consciously subverting clay's associations as a masculine and/or craft medium. As the '70s played out, a generation of artists like Andrea Gill, Nancy Selvin, and Betty Woodman did not just embrace the decorative strategies of the Pattern & Decoration Movement, they also sought to place a feminist spin on their work. As ceramics become more common in a fine art context, hierarchies surrounding different materials faded, giving artists the ability to experiment and construct narrative and meaning through pattern. Long denigrated as "decorative" and closely associated with domesticity, patterns are now an integral part of the language of contemporary art.
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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, November 21 |
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Laurent Craste: Iconoclasts Everson Museum of Art
Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
"Iconoclasts" marks the American museum debut for French-born Canadian ceramist Laurent Craste. Over the past decade, Craste has committed a wide range of indignities and abuse against his ornate vases and urns, including pummeling them with baseball bats and crowbars and piercing them with arrows. Despite the violence that runs through his work, Craste has a great passion for historical porcelain. Working with porcelain allows Craste to explore the prestige and power of upper-class society, but also inequality and the strain that is placed on working people. The anthropomorphic nature of Craste's vases echoes the human body, making it no surprise that people feel strong emotions when seeing a helpless vase struck by a baseball bat. Triggering these strong emotions in his audience allows Craste to connect on a deeper level as he asks questions about class, money, and power.
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11:00 AM - 4:00 PM, November 21 |
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Corpórea La Casita Cultural Center
La Casita Cultural Center
109 Otisco St.,
Syracuse
Corpórea is a showcase of powerful, large-scale works in mixed media, body maps created by a collaborative of local Latino artists, community members, SU faculty and students through a series of adult workshops that integrate the principles of Art Therapy. Facilitated by Syracuse University graduate student in Creative Art Therapy, Bennie Guzmán, the workshops explored themes of healing, identity, and embodiment, and the transformative power of creativity.
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2:00 PM - 6:00 PM, November 21 |
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Reclaiming Our Collective Inheritance: A Palestinian Diaspora Collection ArtRage Gallery
Price: Free ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave.,
Syracuse
The Palestinian thobe is more than an embroidered garment — it is a living archive. For Palestinians in the diaspora, these intricately stitched dresses are tangible connections to a homeland many have never seen, yet fiercely carry within them. Each motif tells a story — of identity, ancestral village, and unbroken resilience. Tragically, many thobes have been lost to time, war, and dispossession — from heirloom dresses smuggled out of Palestine to stolen thobes rediscovered in antique markets, their narratives preserved only in the whispers of fading thread. This exhibit, "Reclaiming Our Collective Inheritance," is both a memorial and a call to action: to rescue, preserve, remember, and honor the hands that embroidered them. More than fabric, these thobes weave memory and return into every stitch. This is more than an exhibit — it is a reclamation. An act of cultural preservation which ensures that this art form, and the Palestinian narrative itself, remains alive for future generations.
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5:15 PM - 11:00 PM, November 21 |
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The Portal's Keeper Urban Video Project
Price: Free Everson Museum of Art Plaza
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
Media artists LaJuné McMillian and Manuel Molina Martagon worked with local, community-engaged creatives Kofi Antwi, Clove Flores, Sofia Gutierrez, and Martikah Williams. Together, they discussed their practices and their visions for a liberated future. The artists asked them to embody their answers not only through words, but through movement as well. "The Portal's Keeper" realizes those visions through the technological "portal" of a popular game engine better known for first-person shooter and battle royale MMO games. Here, the artists use this technology not to realistically simulate violence, but instead as a means to represent what liberation might look like. Screening, projected on the museum wall, begins at dusk.
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Music |
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7:00 PM, November 21 |
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Ellen Pieroni & The Encyclopedia of Soul The 443 Social Club
The 443 Social Club
443 Burnet Ave.,
Syracuse
Ellen Pieroni is a soul jazz saxophone player and multi-instrumentalist from Buffalo. She has been playing the saxophone since she was 8 years old, and has been a sidewoman in a multitude of bands (including Folkfaces and Buffalo Afrobeat Orchestra) for over a decade. Pieroni's smooth-infused soul jazz band Ellen Pieroni & the Encyclopedia of Soul, or EoS, was recently featured on NPR's All Things Considered as one of three "jazz stand outs" for the 2024 Tiny Desk Contest, where Felix Contreras said that "soul jazz is alive and well with…Ellen Pieroni & the Encyclopedia of Soul." Although the group is inspired by artists such as Grover Washington Jr., King Curtis, and the Crusaders, EoS puts an emphasis on new original music. The sound is driven by Pieroni's captivating and soulful melodies, supported by thoughtful improvisation from all members over deep pocket grooves.
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8:00 PM, November 21 |
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*SOLD OUT* Lucky Numbers: EP Release Show CNY Jazz Arts Foundation
Jazz Central
441 E. Washington St.,
Syracuse
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8:00 PM, November 21 |
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The Rough & Tumble Folkus Project
Price: $20 regular, $17 Folkus members May Memorial Unitarian Society
3800 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
A unique blend of dumpster-folk and thrift store-Americana The Rough and Tumble, a dynamic duo comprised of Mallory Graham and Scott Tyler, have been captivating audiences with their unique blend of dumpster-folk and thrift store-Americana for over a decade. The Pennsylvania-born Graham and Central California's Tyler have a knack for weaving together elements of joy, sorrow, comedy, and drama in their music, leaving audiences on the edge of their seats.
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Poetry/Reading |
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7:00 PM, November 21 |
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Author Matthew Gavin Frank Downtown Writer's Center
Price: Free YMCA Downtown
340 Montgomery St.,
Syracuse
Matthew Gavin Frank is the author of six nonfiction books, including Flight of the Diamond Smugglers, The Mad Feast, and Preparing the Ghost, and three poetry books. His new nonfiction book, Submersed — a blend of literary prose, science writing, and true crime about the amateur submarine-building community and our obsession with the deep sea — was released June 2025 from Pantheon Books. This event will take place in person and be streamed on Zoom.
Zoom registration
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Theater |
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7:30 PM, November 21 |
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Lizzie Borden Took an Axe Covey Theatre Company Garrett Heater, director
Hosmer Auditorium, Everson Museum
401 Harrison St.,
Syracuse
The brutal 1892 double homicide of Fall River, MA, mill owner Andrew Borden and his second wife Abby shocked Victorian Americans. Suspicion quickly fell on Andrew's daughter Lizzie, resulting in a sensationalized trial and Lizzie's eventual acquittal. The most historically accurate play on the subject, Lizzie Borden Took an Axe, by Garrett Heater brings court transcripts and testimony of the horrific murders to dramatic life. Having inaugurated the company in 2010, Lizzie ... celebrates 15 years of Covey Theater in Syracuse with this brand new production.
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8:00 PM, November 21 |
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Antigonick Syracuse University Drama Department Matthew Winning and Erica Murphy, director
Storch Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St.,
Syracuse
Canadian poet Anne Carson's stunning translation revives and boldly reworks Sophokles' tragic meditation on tyranny and civil disobedience.
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Next week >>>
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