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Department of Art Visiting Speaker Series: Dara Friedman

112 Center for the Arts (Screening Room)

Dara Friedman uses everyday sights and sounds as the raw material for film and video artworks that reverberate with emotional energy. With a background in structural film and dance, Friedman’s cinema calls for a radical reduction of the medium to its most essential material properties. Friedman’s solo exhibitions include: The Tiger’s Tail, San Carlo Cremona, […]

Dept. of History: Prof. Robin Mitchell, “Methods and Madness: A Historian’s Search for the (In)Visible in the Archives”

532 Park Hall

Please join the Department of History on September 30th from 3:00-5:00 PM in Park 532 for their first speaker of the semester. Distinguished Visiting Scholar, Prof. Robin Mitchell. Prof. Mitchell will give a talk titled, "Methods and Madness: A Historian’s Search for the (In)Visible in the Archives." This is a hybrid event with options to […]

Poetics Plus Series: Aja Couchois Duncan, Readings from “Vestigial”

Zoom

  Aja Couchois Duncan is a poet and translator who works in hybrid genres within Native American studies, ecopoetics, and LGBTQIA studies. During this Zoom event, she will be reading from her new book Vestigial, which tracks a poetic narrative across multiple chronologies and scales--from the personal to the geologic. Duncan is a social justice […]

Department of Art Visiting Speaker Series: Roberley Bell

112 Center for the Arts (Screening Room)

Roberley Bell is inspired by nature and time. Her practice draws on the world around her, in particular the scrutiny of nature and the built environment. Alongside her sculpture practice, Bell has developed a practice of walking moving outside the studio to investigate place in real time. Bell is the recipient of numerous fellowships including awards […]

Department of Art Visiting Speaker Series: Michele Washington

112 Center for the Arts (Screening Room)

Michele Washington is a NYC-based designer. She applies Design Thinking and User-Centered Interaction Design solutions to address complex issues which deliver meaningful solutions and solve problems that are culturally relevant. Recent projects include mobile publishing platforms and web-based integration, content strategy and curating popups. She has worked with Coforma, A Long Walk Home, City as Living Lab, the […]

Baird Lecture Series: Jonathan De Souza, “Embodiment in Musical Ensembles”

Baird Recital Hall, Second Floor

Please join the Department of Music for a guest lecture by Jonathan De Souza. De Souza, Associate Professor of Music at the University of Western Ontario, will present a talk titled "Embodiment in Musical Ensembles" as part of the new Baird Lecture Series. De Souza's most recent book Music at Hand explored questions of musical […]

Performance Research Workshop: Gina Athena Ulysse, #BlackLiberationMashup

112 Center for the Arts (Screening Room)

Please join us for Gina Athena Ulysse’s bold and timely performance, #BlackLiberationMashup. Free and open to the public. #BlackLiberationMashUp” remixes excerpts from texts by activists, academics and artists on questions of liberation in the Black diaspora spanning over two centuries. This rasanblaj includes M. Jacqui Alexander, James Baldwin, Amiri Baraka, Suzanne Césaire, Amil Cabral, Antenor […]

Scholars@Hallwalls: Alexandra Zirkle, “Chastening Germany: Graetz’s Lusty Jew and Asexual Jewess as Semitic Saviors”

Hallwalls Contemporary Arts Center 341 Delaware Avenue, Buffalo, NY, United States

Please join us in the cinema space at Hallwalls Contemporary Arts Center! Heinrich Graetz (1817-1891), the famous historian and biblical exegete, penned his commentary to the Song of Songs in 1871 to counter rising antisemitism fueled by racialized fantasies of Jewish gender and sexuality. Graetz contested antisemitic tropes of Jewish manhood and womanhood by reconfiguring […]

Department of Art Visiting Speaker Series: Tony Bluestone

112 Center for the Arts (Screening Room)

Tony Bluestone (b. Englewood, New Jersey) received an MFA from Hunter college and has participated in residencies including The Shandanken Project, The Basil Alakazi Residency in Detroit, DNA Residency in Provincetown and The Prattsville Art Center. She has had solo shows at Freight & Volume Gallery, Elaine L Jacob gallery at Wayne State University in […]

Dept. of Indigenous Studies: Waylon Wilson, “Designing Anti-Colonial Video Game Culture”

212 O'Brian Hall

  Please join the Department of Indigenous Studies for a research talk by Waylon Wilson, Skarù:rę (Tuscarora) Nation, Deer clan and Ph.D. Candidate in Performing & Media Arts at Cornell University.   Designing Anti-Colonial Video Game Culture Can “Critical Play” make an anti-colonial intervention in game play? The interactive subjectivity of the gamer in 21st […]