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PRESS CONTACT:
David Manning
212. 817.7177 or 7170
dmanning@gc.cuny.edu
March 2008
for IMMEDIATE release
APRIL PUBLIC PROGRAMS
The City University of New York Graduate Center announces the following
public programs to be held during the month of April at the Graduate Center,
365 Fifth Avenue at 34th Street.
Through Saturday, April 19
Gerardo Rueda: Spanish Modernist
(art exhibition) Tuesdays—Saturdays, 12:00–6:00 PM
The Amie and Tony James Gallery of the Graduate Center presents Gerardo Rueda,
Spanish Modernist, an exhibition of forty-two paintings dating from
1957 to 1996. The exhibition highlights the abstract, constructivist work of
an often overlooked artist who carried the torch of modernism in a country that
for much of the 20th century remained isolated—geographically and politically—from
the main currents of European art. On loan from the Fundación Gerardo
Rueda in Madrid and Institut Valencia d’Art Modern, the exhibition is curated
by distinguished critic Barbara Rose. The James Gallery is located off
the lobby of the Graduate Center, 365 Fifth Avenue at 34th Street. Free,
for information call 212-817-7394.
Tuesday, April 1
Bubbles in Beijing: Architecture, Physics, and the Olympics
(discussion) 6:30–8:00 PM
The Olympic aquatics pavilion in Beijing resembles a box of bubbles. This extraordinary
feat of architechure and engineering will be discussed by Denis Weaire, physics
professor at Trinity College Dublin, who first observed the efficiency of bubble
structures, and a representative from the engineering firm Arup, famous for
their design contributions to some of the greatest buildings of our time. Presented
by Science & the Arts; free, for information call 212-817-7522.
Wednesday, April 2
Brands of Faith: Marketing and Religion
(discussion) 6:30 PM, Martin E. Segal Theatre
Over the past two decades, tactics of branding and marketing have been applied
to the promotion of religion, adding to the commercial clutter of today’s
society. This panel discussion will explore the political, social, and theological
implications of this ever-increasing commoditization of faith. Discussants
will include Mara Einstein, Associate Professor of Media Studies, Queens College,
author of Brands of Faith: Marketing Religion in A Commercial Age; Heather
Hendershot, Professor of Media Studies, Queens College, author of Shaking
the World for Jesus: Media and Conservative Evangelical Culture; Douglas
Rushkoff, Director of the ITP Narrative Lab at NYU’s Tisch School, and
the author of Nothing Sacred: The Truth About Judaism; and Jeff Sharlet,
contributing editor, Harper’s, and co-creator and editor of
www.therevealor.org. Presented
by the Center for the Humanities; free, for information call 212-817-2005.
Thursday, April 3
Junot Diaz & Francisco Goldman in Conversation
(discussion) 6:30 PM, Martin E. Segal Theatre
Acclaimed writers Junot Diaz and Francisco Goldman discuss writing lives, through
history and fiction, with Lynn Di Iorio, Assistant Professor of English at City
College and the Graduate Center. Junot Diaz is the author of Drown and The
Brief and Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao; Francisco Goldman is the author of
the award-winning novels The Long Night of White Chickens, The Ordinary Seaman, and The
Divine Husband. Presented by the Center for the Humanities; free,
for information call 212-817-2005.
Monday, April 7
Blackface: Examining the Minstrel Tradition
(discussion) 6:30 PM
This panel discussion will bring together scholars and writers to examine the
influence of the wildly popular and deeply reviled art of minstrelsy on American
culture. Participants include Camille F. Forbes, Assistant Professor of African-American
Literature and Culture, University of California-San Diego, and author of the
newly published Introducing Bert Williams: Burnt Cork, Broadway and the Story
of America's First Black Star; Eric Lott, Professor of English, the University
of Virginia, whose books include Love and Theft: Blackface Minstrelsy and
the American Working Class; Mel Watkins, whose books include Stepin
Fetchit: The Life and Times of Lincoln Perry; and Greg Tate, whose books
include Everything But the Burden: What White People Are Taking From Black
Culture. Moderated by Gary Giddins, whose most recent book is Natural
Selection: Gary Giddins on Comedy, Film, and Music. Presented by the Center
for the Humanities; free, for information call 212-817-2005.
Ferocious Beauty: Dance and Genetics
(discussion, with video) 6:30–8:00 PM
Liz Lerman, choreographer, believes in the power of art to enhance civic dialogue.
Her new dance/theater piece, Ferocious Beauty: Genome, investigates
the implications of genetic research. Among her collaborators in creating the
work was Bonnie Bassler, renowned Princeton University microbiologist, who
will join her in a dialogue. The talk will be illustrated with video segments,
providing a preview of the dance piece before its first performance in the
New York area. Presented
by Science & the Arts; free, for information call 212-817-7522.
Wednesday, April 9
From Rags to Riches: An Evening of Stories from Garment Industry Manufacturers
(discussion) 6:30–8:30 PM Elebash Recital Hall
Join historians Richard Greenwald, Drew University, and Suzanne Wasserman, Director,
The Gotham Center/CUNY, as they interview veterans of the garment industry. This
evening will focus on the Jewish manufacturers who worked and still work in every
aspect of the industry, starting in 1945 -- from manufacturing custom-made doormen
uniforms to marketing the first pair of women's blue jeans. Special guests include:
Stuart and Jennifer Busch, Owners, I. Buss and Allan Uniforms; Gloria Gelfand,
President, Gelfand Marketing Solutions; Richard Schwartz, former Chairman, New
York State Council on the Arts and others. Presented by the Gotham Center for
NYC History; free, for information call 212-817-8474 (reservations not accepted).
Writing the World: Literature and the Environment
(discussion) 6:30 PM, Proshansky Auditorium
This discussion will explore how different genres of writing can sensitize readers
to environmental concerns, moving issues from the isolated realm of scientific
discourse into the broader cultural imagination. Featuring ecologist Bill McKibben,
author of numerous books, including Deep Economy: The Wealth of Communities
and the Durable Future; Daniel Hillel, a researcher at Columbia University's
Center for Climate Systems Research, and the author of many books, including The
Natural History of the Bible; poet Susan Howe, whose most recent collection
of poetry is Souls of the Labadie Tract; and essayist Eliot Weinberger,
author of An Elemental Thing. Moderated by Joan Richardson, Professor
of English and Comparative Literature, the Graduate Center. Presented
by the Center for the Humanities; free, for information call 212-817-2005.
Thursday, April 10
Music in Midtown:
The Prometheus Piano Quartet plays Brahms
(concert) 1:00– 2:00 PM, Elebash Recital Hall
The Prometheus Piano Quartet has performed throughout the United States, and
has appeared in the Great Performers Series at Lincoln Center. The quartet
is known for its wide-ranging programming as well as the subtlety of its performances.
The quartet's recording of quartets by D'Indy and Saint-Saens, for Centaur,
has received great critical acclaim. The group has been engaged by Centaur
to record the three piano quartets of Brahms. Presented by the D.M.A.
Program in Performance; free, for information call 212-817-8607.
Friday, April 11
Rites of Return: Poetics and Politics
(conference) Elebash Recital Hall; also on Thursday, April 10, at Columbia
Law School
What is driving the contemporary obsession with the recovery of roots? Join
world-renowned scholars, writers, artists, and curators as they explore questions
of origin and identity, national and cultural memory, "trauma tourism," and museums
of conscience. Participants include writers Daniel Mendelsohn, Saidiya Hartman,
and Eva Hoffman; photographers Keith Calhoun, Chandra McCormick, and Susan Meiselas;
journalist Amira Hass; and scholars Svetlana Boym, Marianne Hirsch, Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett,
Nancy K. Miller, Leo Spitzer, Diana Taylor, David Troutt, and Patricia Williams. (The
two-day symposium begins at Columbia University Law School on April 10 and continues
in the Elebash Recital Hall at the Graduate Center on April 11.) Presented
by the Center for the Humanities; free, for information call 212-817-2005. For
a complete conference schedule, please visit http://web.gc.cuny.edu/Humanities/index.html.
Monday, April 14
Saul Friedlander: Nazi Germany and the Jews, The Years
of Extermination
(discussion) 6:30 PM, Proshansky Auditorium
Saul Friedlander is Professor of History at the University of California, Los
Angeles, and a preeminent scholar of modern European and Jewish history. Friedlander's
books include Nazi Germany and the Jews, vol. 1: The Years of Persecution,
1933-1939; Nazi Germany and the Jews, vol. 2: The Years of Extermination; and Reflections
of Nazism. Presented by the Center for the Humanities and co-sponsored
by the Ph.D. Program in History; free, for information call 212-817-2005.
Lost Apple Plays/Cuban "Pedro Pan" Exodus
(reading & discussion) 6:30 PM, Martin E. Segal Theatre
An evening of scenes from plays followed by a discussion about Operation Pedro
Pan, the 1960-62 exodus of more than 14,000 unaccompanied minors from Cuba to
the U.S. Presented by the Martin E. Segal Theatre Center as part of NYC's Immigrant
Heritage Week 2008; free, for information call 212-817-1861.
Tuesday, April 15
Re-Visiting al-Andalus: Muslims, Christians, and Jews in Medieval Spain
4:00–7:00 PM, Elebash Recital Hall
Medieval Muslim Spain, known as al-Andalus, was home to Christians, Muslims,
and Jews. This unique co-existence of the three faiths on European soil nurtured
original forms of cultural expression and creative scholarship. This interdisciplinary
conference brings together leading experts on literature, history, and art
history to explore the complexities and nuance of this remarkable historic
and human encounter. Speakers include: Ross Brann, Olivia Remie Constable,
Jerrilynn Dodds, Jane S. Gerber, Raymond Scheindlin, and David Wasserstein. Presented
by the Center for Jewish Studies; free, for information call 212-817-1950.
Wednesday, April 16
City of the World:
Ozan Aksoy Trio with the CUNY Middle Eastern Music Ensemble
(concert) 7:30 PM, Baisley Powell Elebash Recital Hall
The second event in the series City of the World features the NYC-based Ozan
Aksoy Trio. This group, founded in 2005, draws from Turkish, Armenian, Kurdish,
Greek, Jewish, Arabic, and Alevi musical heritages. The evening’s repertoire
will feature folk tunes from these regions, performed on traditional instruments
from Anatolia. This performance also marks the debut of the CUNY Middle Eastern
Music Ensemble, directed by Ozan Aksoy. Presented by the Ph.D./D.M.A.
Programs in Music; free, for information call 212-817-8607.
Friday, April 18
Dancing in the Dark: Sounds and Scenes from the Great Depression
A Talk by Morris Dickstein
(discussion) 3:30 PM, Proshansky Auditorium
Graduate Center Distinguished Professor Morris Dickstein will give this talk
as the keynote address of the conference Hacking the Nation: 10 Years of American
Studies at the CUNY Graduate Center. The lecture is part of a day-long
exploration of American Studies from many perspectives, including science, trans-Atlantic
studies, visual culture, and the printed word. Presented by the American
Studies Certificate Program; free, for information call 212-817-8001.
Tuesday, April 22
Climate of Concern/Short Plays on Global Warming
(reading & discussion) 4:00–8:30 PM, Elebash Recital Hall
Readings of short plays by Don DeLillo, Brian Tucker and John Jesurun beginning
at 6:30. Digital media art performance by Andrea Polli at 4:00. Both events
will be followed by panels on art, science,and sustainable development. Presented
by the Martin E. Segal Theatre Center; free, for information call 212-817-1860.
Thursday, April 24
Manhattan/Farm Hall: A Play Reading
(reading & discussion) 6:30–8:00 PM
A play reading about the moral dilemma surrounding the building of The Bomb.
This new play was written by French actor Olivier Treiner and his father, physicist
Jacques Treiner, who will be present at the performance. The American development
of the atomic bomb was, in part, the work of renowned European physicists who
fled the Nazi regime. How did they wrestle with their concerns about the use
of atomic weaponry? Late in the war, the Allies captured ten German scientists
who were thought to have worked on Germany's nuclear weapons program and placed
them in a wiretapped manor house called Farm Hall. How did they react to the
bomb that leveled Hiroshima? The play, based in part on actual transcripts
of conversations, delves into these complex issues. Reading by Break A Leg
Productions. Presented
by Science & the Arts; free, for information call 212-817-8215.
Saturday, April 26
The Holocaust in Greece
(discussion) 6:15 PM , Martin E. Segal Theatre
This lecture will focus on the tragedy that befell the Jewish community of Greece
during the Nazi era. Based on recent archival revelations, the lecture will also
cover a variety of until-now undocumented historical accounts relating to the
Holocaust in Greece, including the participation of Greek Jews in the anti-Nazi
resistance movement. Bowman is Professor of Judaic Studies in
the Department of Judaic Studies, University of Cincinnati. He is the author
of several monographs, including Jews in Byzantium, 1204-1453 (1985).
His The Agony of Greek Jewry during World War II is forthcoming. Presented
by the Rosenthal Institute for Holocaust Studies; free, for 212-817-1945.
Monday, April 28
Torture and the Decline of Empire
(discussion) 6:30 PM, Elebash Recital Hall
This event will examine the historical relationship between torture and imperial
power from multiple vantages. Participants will include Karen Greenberg, Executive
Director of the Center on Law and Society, New York University, and the editor
of The Torture Papers: The Road to Abu Ghraib; Amy Kaplan, Professor
of English at the University of Pennsylvania and author of numerous books and
articles, including "Where is Guantanamo?"; and Marnia Lazreg, Professor
of Sociology, the Graduate Center, and author of Torture and the Twilight
of Empire: From Algiers to Baghdad. Presented by the Center
for the Humanities; free, for information call 212-817-2005.
Tuesday, April 29
Hollywood Science
(discussion) 7:30–9:00 PM
From space travel and genetic engineering to global warming, science is portrayed
on movie screens with fact and fantasy, and scientists are heroes, nerds, and
villains. Sidney Perkowitz, Charles Howard Candler Professor of Physics at Emory
University and author of the new book Hollywood Science, will discuss
the portrayal of science in films, from science fiction to scientific biographies
and documentaries. He will also screen some examples. Presented by
Science & the Arts; free, for information call 212-817-7522.
Wednesday, April 30 - This event has been rescheduled to Thursday,
May 22.
Black Is, Black Ain't/Eternal Ancestors:
Curators Hamza Walker and Alisa La Gamma in Conversation
(discussion) 6:30 PM
What is the impact of powerful images and objects made explicitly for one community
on another? Hamza Walker, contemporary art curator at the University of Chicago's
Renaissance Society, and Alisa LaGamma, curator at the Metropolitan Museum's
Department of the Arts of Africa, Oceania and the Americas, discuss the genesis
and cultural implications of two controversial exhibitions: Walker's Black
Is, Black Ain't, and La Gamma's recent Eternal Ancestors: The Art of
the Central African Reliquary. Linda Norden, Director of the James
Gallery at the Graduate Center, will moderate. Presented by the Center
for the Humanities; free, for information call 212-817-2005.
Wednesday, April 30—Saturday, May 3
PEN World Voices Playwrights Festival
(theatre festival) Martin E. Segal Theatre
At the PEN World Voices Playwrights Festival, the Martin E. Segal Center presents
play readings and panel discussions with Biljana Srbljanovic, Binyavanga Wainaina,
Horatio Castallanos Moya, Carmen Boullosa, Michel Tremblay, Àngels Aymar,
Kristín Ómarsdóttir, Ximena Escalante, and Alvis Hermanis.
Presented by the Martin E. Segal Theatre Center; free, for information call 212-817-1861. For
complete schedule, visit http://web.gc.cuny.edu/mestc.
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