The Everson Museum of Art is hosting its 39th annual Festival of Trees & Light from Dec. 5-8 and 11-15, featuring a Christmas tree display, art workshops and holiday performances. Read more »
Lynne Sachs’ documentary, “This Side of Salina,” highlights what a post-Roe v. Wade world looks like in Syracuse, even though abortion is still legal.
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Manuel Matías displayed his five miniature art pieces at La Casita Cultural Center’s WEIRD Barrio exhibit, drawing attention to the story of many Latine descendants. Read more »
Cali M. Banks’ 31-part exhibition, 'I’ve Learned to Hold Myself Softly,' reflects her identity and examines areas of Syracuse that have been neglected, abandoned and gentrified over the years. Read more »
Elizabeth Dunbar, CEO of the Everson Museum of Art, and Louise Rosenfield, collector and Everson trustee, partnered on a cafe, “Louise.” The cafe is where visitors of the Everson Museum can enjoy beautiful ceramics and good food. Read more »
Sana Musasama’s exhibit at the Everson Museum of Art features dolls based on African American topsy-turvy dolls, made of clay and fabrics. Musasama revisited work she had made 40 years ago for the exhibit. Read more »
“Imagination and Desire in a Northern Landscape” compiles digital art of the Arctic. The artist, Janet Biggs, conveys how it is still impacted by human actions despite being detached from the rest of the world.
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With original photography combined with “found objects,” David Edward Johnson’s exhibit tells the story of a father and son. The nostalgic art honors Johnson’s father through his late-stage Alzheimer’s disease with photos of West Texas. Read more »
Choreographer Maya Kulkarni pulled pieces from ancient Hindu texts and merged them with modern themes to craft the “Shilpanatanam” dance at the Everson Museum of Art — a celebration of past and present. Read more »
The SU Art Museum displays its latest exhibit, ‘The Art of Peter B. Jones,’ curated by a team of Indigenous undergraduate and graduate students.
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For the Renée Crown University Honors Program’s inaugural symposium titled “The Value of Beauty and Beauty in Science,” philosopher Angela Breitenbach and artist Suzanne Anker stopped by SU to discuss topics surrounding science, art and beauty.
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