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Exhibitions
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Exhibition: The Minox & the Big Shot -- Andy Warhol’s Photography (1970-87)
Exhibition runs September 23rd through December 13th, 2009. Opening: Wednesday, September 23rd, 5-7:30 pm. The University Gallery proudly presents its acquisition of 100 original Polaroid photographs and 50 original black and white gelatin silver prints dating from 1970 to 1987 granted through the Andy Warhol Photographic Legacy Program. These photographs were given to the University Gallery as part of an unprecedented gift in honor of the Andy Warhol Foundation's 20th anniversary. The aim of the Photographic Legacy Program is to provide greater access to Warhol's artwork and process, and to enable a wide range of people from communities across the country to view and study this important yet relatively unknown body of Warhol's work.
An obsessive photographer, Warhol took more than 100,000 photographs between 1976 and 1987, most with his SX70 Polaroid camera (which Polaroid kept in production just for Warhol) and black and white prints with a pocket-sized Minox 35 mm camera. Some Polaroids served as source material for large, silk-screened portrait paintings for which Warhol is famous. These photographs range from celebrities to unidentified acquaintances or patrons. The black and white snapshots offer a fascinating glimpse of the people and places of Warhol's life. In the end, some of the most captivating photographs are not the celebrities, but rather those of everyday objects and people.
As the University Gallery’s first Curatorial Fellow, Kathleen Banach (M.A. candidate in Art History ’09) will work in consultation with the staff of the University Gallery and art history professor Mario Ontiveros to focus her research on these photographs. She will be the first to study this relatively unknown body of Warhol’s work.
Seen in conjunction with this exhibition is CONNECTING THE DOTS….. THE WARHOL LEGACY: TOM FRIEDMAN, ELLLEN GALLAGHER, VIK MUNIZ, ROB PRUITT, an exhibition of work by four acclaimed contemporary artists who explore themes and ideas central to Andy Warhol’s artistic practice.
Check the University Gallery’s website for related panel discussions, guest speakers, and film screenings.
Gallery hours: Tuesday-Friday 11 am-4:30 pm; Saturday & Sunday 2-5 pm. Wheelchair accessible. Free parking evenings and weekends.
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Exhibition: Connecting the Dots….the Warhol Legacy: Tom Friedman, Ellen Gallagher, Vik Muniz & Rob Pruitt
Exhibition runs September 23rd through December 13th, 2009. Opening: Wednesday, September 23rd, 5-7:30 pm.
An exhibition of work by four acclaimed contemporary artists who explore themes and ideas central to Andy Warhol’s artistic practice, demonstrating how Warhol’s legacy continues to influence and shape the content of the work of a new generation of artists. Rather than look strictly at artists who have been stylistically influenced by Warhol, this exhibition focuses on the work of four leading artists where the Warholian impulse is more conceptual and subtle.
Tom Friedman transforms mundane consumer products into playful yet meticulously crafted artworks of almost obsessive intricacy. Friedman’s art is characterized by its attention to process and use of modest, ephemeral materials. Friedman also displays a sly, almost scientific interest in systems of representation. Works in the exhibition will include the serial sculpture 9 Lives and two digital prints, Dollar Bill (2000) and Mandala (2008), commissioned by University Gallery and UMass Art Dept.
Repetition and revision are central to Ellen Gallagher’s treatment of advertisements that she appropriates from popular magazines such as Ebony, Our World, and Sepia. Her medium of printmaking, immersed in ideas about process and the mechanics of transformation, echoes some of Warhol’s themes. However her aesthetic strategy differs from her predecessor in its autobiographical dimension and focus on the issue of racial identity, while at the same time suggesting a more formal reading with respect to materials, processes, and altered states.
Vik Muniz defies traditional concerns over appropriation and authorship to reveal the power of images in our collective memory. Creating images made of dust, chocolate sauce, sugar, or thread, his work is informed by media and popular culture. This exhibition will include The Best of Life (1989 – 2000), a portfolio of ten Memory Renderings, which are photographs of drawings he drew from his recollection of photographs from Life magazine between 1936 and 1972.
Rob Pruitt’s work is rooted in a pop sensibility and a playful critique of art world structures. His conceptual projects have encompassed sensational staged events as well as simple gestures that promote possibilities for creativity in everyday life. Pruitt’s work is always characterized by an incisive humor and exuberant visual flair. This exhibition will focus on iPruitt (2008), snapshots taken with his mobile camera.
Gallery hours: Tuesday-Friday 11 am-4:30 pm; Saturday & Sunday 2-5 pm. Wheelchair accessible. Free parking evenings and weekends.
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William Kentridge: What Will Come
This installation features the debut of an important new addition to the SCMA collection, “What Will Come” (2006), a major film by the South African artist William Kentridge. One of the most innovative aspects of Kentridge’s work is his hand-drawn films. “What Will Come” takes its title from a Ghanaian proverb: “What will come has already come," a sentiment reflected in the imagery of the film, which speaks to the range of conflicts that have marked modern human history. This work also displays Kentridge’s keen interest in optics. The film is projected from the ceiling onto a round metal table which bears a polished circular column in its center. The images are reflected on the surface of the column, which corrects the perspective of the drawing for the viewer. The images circumnavigate this column, changing form as they move to a haunting musical track. Through Dec. 31. For more information abou this exhibition, museum hours and other museum information, see www.smith.edu/artmuseum/.
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Exhibit: The Making of a Picture Book: The Marriage of Text and Art
Exhibit runs 9/14-12/18. Showcasing the works of local authors/illustrators: Leonard Baskin, Kathryn Brown, Corinne Demas, Patricia MacLachlan, Richard Michelson, Dennis Nolan, Jane Yolen.
Info: 545-3971 or http://tiny.cc/picturebook. Gallery hours follow library hours: open Saturdays 9 am-9 pm, then Sunday from 11 am onward, open 24 hours a day through Friday (www.library.umass.edu/hours.html). Handicap accessible.
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Exhibit: All Roads Lead Back to Amherst
Exhibit runs 9/15-12/11. Nature photographs by Annie (Fournier) Tiberio Cameron ’73, UMass Amherst.
Opening reception 9/15, 4:00-6:00 pm, refreshments.
Handicap accessible. More info: www.library.umass.edu/news
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Touch Fire: Contemporary Japanese Ceramics by Women Artists
Composed of more than 90 vibrant and dynamic ceramic sculptures, this exhibitition features leading contemporary Japanese women artists working within and transforming a medium traditionally associated with men. The accompanying catalogue, with an essay by ceramics specialist Todate Kazuko, Chief Curator at the Tsukuba Art Museum (Ibaraki, Japan) and artists biographies by Wahei Aoyama, provides the first in-depth study of the phenomenal rise of women ceramic artists in Japan. Oct. 9-Feb. 28, 2010. See http://www.smith.edu/artmuseum/general/ for Museum hours and other information.
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Exhibit: Never Again: Genocide from Cambodia to Darfur and Beyond
Exhibit runs 11/2/09-11/13/09. The public is cordially invited to a reception on Tuesday 11/3 from 5-6pm, immediately followed by artist talks in the gallery.
The Student Union Art Gallery proudly presents three exhibits that share a commitment to educating our communities about genocide and empowering people to take action.
The exhibits by artist Amy Fagin, artist Leah Roth-Howe, and organizers STAND: A Student Anti-Genocide Coalition and the Western Massachusetts Darfur Coalition will share the gallery space to create dialogue about genocide in all corners of the world.
STAND: A Student Anti-Genocide Coalition and the Western Massachusetts Darfur Coalition present The Children of Darfur: Surviving Genocide, a collection of drawings made by children at the Kalma refugee camp in Darfur. While children were in line to receive shots and medical treatment, Dr. Jerry Erhlich of Doctors Without Borders gave them crayons and paper and asked them to draw ‘what your life in Darfur is.’
Through a 100 Projects For Peace grant, Leah Roth-Howe spent 8 months living and working with Cambodian-American and Cambodian youth and adults who are struggling to understand their history and place in the world. Ending the Silence in Cambodia is an exhibit of the drawings, poetry, and prose they created in artistic workshops to explore the legacies of the Khmer Rouge genocide.
Beyond Genocide is an exhibit of contemporary illuminated manuscripts by artist Amy Fagin. The thoroughly researched and delicately rendered manuscripts wrestle intimately with mass atrocities from all corners of the planet. The exhibit is a powerful artistic commentary on the history of genocide and its legacy to our planet.
The Office of Jewish Affairs is holding panel discussions related to this exhibit:
Genocide, Reconciliation, and Forgiveness 11/3, 7:30pm.
Genocide: From Justice to Prevention 11/10, 7:00pm.
For information on related events, please see: www.umass.edu/jewish/programs/genocide09/
Sponsored by the UMass Office of Jewish Affairs, STAND: A Student Anti-Genocide Coalition, Western Massachusetts Darfur Coalition, Harold Grinspoon Foundation, the UMass Arts Council, the Student Government Association, and the Graduate Student Senate.
Gallery Hours: M-Th 10-5, F 10-3.
Extended hours until 9:30 pm on Tues 11/3 and 11/10.
Closed 11/11 for Veteran’s Day.
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Sergie Rachmaninoff and Sophie Satin at Smith College
Exhibition of photographs and memorabilia of Sergei Rachmaninoff and his cousin Sophie Satin during their time at Smith College. For more information, visit http://www.smith.edu/rachmaninoff/. For library hours, see http://www.smith.edu/libraries/info/hours/
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Rethinking Marxism presents Martha Rosler Library
Rethinking Marxism and New Marxian Times are proud to announce the opening reception for the Martha Rosler Library at Herter Art Gallery, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, on Friday, November 6th from 4-6pm.
Comprised of approximately 7,700 titles from the artist's personal collection, the Library was opened to the public by Anton Vidokle in November 2005 as a storefront reading room at e-flux, on Ludlow Street in New York City. It has since traveled to Frankfurter Kunstverein; MuHKA, Antwerp; unitednationsplaza, Berlin; Institut National d'histoire de l'Art, Paris; the John Moores University, Liverpool; and the Stills Centre, Edinburgh. The Library will remain on view in Amherst through December 10th, 2009, after which the books will be finally return to Martha Rosler's home.
"In an act of incredible generosity, one of America's most important living artists temporarily dispossessed herself of the vast majority of her personal library so that it could be made available for consultation. No borrowing was possible, but the eclectic ensemble of books on economics, political theory, war, colonialism, poetry, feminism, science fiction, art history, mystery novels, children's books, dictionaries, maps and travel books, as well as photo albums, posters, postcards, and newspaper clippings could be studied at will. Smart, decidedly political in orientation, often funny, and all over the place (in that way a perfect mirror of its owner), the library is packed with essential reading and titles that even your better bookstores would love to get their hands on. As the product of decades of avid reading, the contents of the library are both the source of Rosler's work and an installation/artwork that continues many of the concerns with public space, access to information, and engaged citizenship that traverse her entire oeuvre."
--Elena Filipovic, Afterall, issue 15, Spring/Summer 2007
A personal library represents the private sphere of an individual, her way of acquiring and combining knowledge. Accumulation is the result of an intellectual inquiry that takes place in parallel with a more random search, which can lead us to unexpected textual, and therefore mental, spaces. Martha Rosler Library offers the visitor an opportunity to approach this open source of information with her or his own interests, and to create new affinities and connections between the elements of the library that add to more than the sum of knowledge contained in it. The bibliography, currently in process, can be accessed online at http://www.e-flux.com/projects/library
Whenever the Martha Rosler Library docks into a venue–be it a shop front, a gallery, or an office above a supermarket–it evolves in response to its new geographical and social location. A repository of knowledge and ideas, it settles, breathes, and lives again as new readers arrive and new discussions begin. In November 2009, the next chapter will commence at Amherst, another unique context.
Special thanks to Julieta Aranda, Media Farzin, and Tim Ridlen.
Talks:
Friday November 6, 5:00pm
Conversation with Martha Rosler, Anton Vidokle, and Bosko Blagojevic
Keynote speech by Martha Rosler
Dialogue with artists Ernie Larsen and Sherrie Milner
Friday November 6, 8:00-9:30pm
In association with Rethinking Marxism and New Marxian Times
http://www.rethinkingmarxism.org/conf/
Gallery Hours: Monday-Friday 11am-4pm and Sunday 1-4pm
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A Plantsman in Asia
Compelling color photographs by Paul W. Meyer tell vivid stories about the importance of plants in the lives of Asian peoples. The photos were taken over a period of 20 years of plant exploration in the Far East. Meyer, a
leader in the field of plant exploration and evaluation, will be speaking at Smith Nov. 13 in conjunction with Bamboo and Blossoms: The Fall Chrysanthemum Show at Smith Nov. 7-22. The photographs will be on exhibition October 17 through December 15.
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Lecture/Reading
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Financing Life
Financing Life with Professor Randall Bartlett (Economics). Learn the basics of budgeting, managing credit and debt, taxes, home ownership, and much more essential to our everyday financial lives. The more you know the better prepared you'll be. Sponsored by Women and Financial Independence: The Smith College Center for Financial Education. Lunch provided for the first 75 attendees. For more information, contact WFI at 413.585.3653 or visit them on the web at www.smith.edu/wfi.
November 3:
Professor Bartlett will talk more about the fundamentals of investing and take questions. This will include the fundamentals of investing stocks, bonds, mutual funds; risk and return;relevant tax issues.
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“Idealism and Compromise in Politics and Life.”
Three Smith alumnae, all current or former members of the Obama administration, will talk about making a life in politics. Panelists are Farah Pandith '90, Special Representative to Muslim Communities, responsible for executing Secretary of State Hilary Clinton's vision for engagement with Muslims around the world. Stephanie Cutter '90 is currently a fellow at the Harvard Institute of Politics. Most recently, Cutter served as Adviser to the President, overseeing the political and communications strategy for the Supreme Court nomination of Judge Sonia Sotomayor. Julianna Smoot '89 joined the Office of the United States Trade Representative in February 2009 as the Chief of Staff. Prior to joining the USTR, Smoot served as Senior Advisor to President Obama and served as Co-Chair of the Presidential Inaugural Committee.
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Classics Lecture: "Between Epigram and Elegy: Horace as an Amatory Poet"
David Konstan of the Department of Classics at Brown University will give a lecture in the Babbott Room of the Octagon at 4:30 p.m. on Thursday, Nov. 5. All are welcome.
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Connecticut Valley Mathematics Colloquium: "How to Make Great Teachers"
"How to Make Great Teachers"
Abstract: What are great teachers? The answer has changed over the past 100 years, and in recent times people have focused on precise answers under the banner of objectivity and accountability. But measuring effective teaching in this way may be misleading, and it may adversely affect the very quality we set out to measure. Great teachers leave a legacy over many decades, not a few months, and measuring great teachers requires a long-term perspective. This talk will be largely about mathematics teaching in secondary schools, but many of the observations are equally applicable to other subjects.
There will be refreshments prior to the talk, in Seeley Mudd 208, and dinner (reservations required-- e-mail awtorrey@amherst.edu) following in O'Connor Commons.
For more information, see www.amherst.edu/academiclife/departments/mathematics/news.
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"Are Close Relationships Good Medicine for People Coping with a Chronic Illness?"
Dr. Tracey Revenson's research centers on specifying interpersonal and contextual factors that promote optimal adjustment to chronic illness and other health-related stressors for individuals, couples and families. She is well known for her research on coping processes and the influence of interpersonal relationships on health, particularly among women. Dr. Revenson is a Professor of Psychology at City University of New York, and is the co-editor or co-author of six books, including the Handbook of Health Psychology (Erlbaum, 2001), Couples Coping with Illness (APA, 2005), and Ecological Research to Promote Social Change (Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, 2002). She was the founding Editor-in-Chief of the journal, Women's Health: Research on Gender, Behavior and Policy. This lecture is presented by the Kahn Liberal Arts Institute's 2009-2010 project "Wellness & Disease."
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Reading Jesus the Parabler Ecologically
Elaine Wainwright, Richard Maclaurin Goodfellow Professor in Theology at the University of Auckland, will speak on “Reading Jesus the Parabler Ecologically” on Thursday, Nov. 5, at 4:30 p.m. in 201 Chapin Hall. There will be a reception before lecture, at 4 p.m. in Chapin Lounge. The event is sponsored by the Religion Department and the Willis D. Wood Fund and is free and open to the public.
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Documenting the (Un)Documented: Narratives of Diasporic Andeans in Southern/Mediterranean Europe
LECTURE CANCELED
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Lecture on New Media and Digital Public History.
Tom Scheinfeldt, Managing Director of the Center for History and New Media, will give a public lecture, "Digital Public History in the 21st Century," Scheinfeldt is one of the foremost practitioners and advocates for the field of public history and for digital archives, arguing for the expansion of our conception of primary historical sources to include massive, democratically inclusive digital archives. Sheinfeldt's lecture is sponsored by the Archives Concentration, the American Studies Program, and the Smith College Lecture Committee. For more information about Tom Scheinfeldts work, or the Archives Concentration, visit http://www.smith. edu/archives/news.php.
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Mary Gaitskill reads in the Visiting Writers Series
Mary Gaitskill is the author of five books of fiction, most recently, Don't Cry ( stories, 2009). "Secretary," a story from her first collection, Bad Behavior (1988), was made into the film of that name.
Sponsored by the MFA Program for Poets and Writers and JuniperInitiative. Made possible by support from the Massachusetts CulturalCouncil, University of Massachusetts Arts Council, UMass Amherst AlumniAssociaion, Vice Provost of Research & Engagement, College ofHumanities & Fine Arts, and English Department.
Wheelchair accessible.
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