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Ballet and Jazz Shine in Spring Dance Concerts
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rilliant performances of ballet and jazz dance will be performed in the School of Art Annual Spring Dance
Concerts 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 23, Thursday, May 24, Friday, May 25, and Saturday, May 26 in Wellin Hall, Hamilton College. All four shows will feature Diva, Kathy Ryan’s powerful and lyrical dance suite to the music of Annie Lennox. Bonded features the Dance Program’s graduating seniors Andrea Ashcroft, Hannah Hage, and Lauren Pugh. The energy and passion of the dancers combined with boldly colored, ornate and flowing dresses bring an edgy glamour to the stage. Endangered, with earthy tribal music, is highlighted on Wednesday and Thursday on the Jazz Program. This updated version includes new choreography to feature our guest male dancers, Nik Allen, Trevor Jones, and Matthew Sparks and select students. To round out the program, audiences are invited to a good old time party with our young dancers in R.S.V.P. where bright colors, fun tunes, and big smiles abound.
On Friday and Saturday night audiences young and old will be entertained by the charming tale of The Twelve Dancing Princesses, a lively story about twelve sisters and their mysterious adventures at night. Nik Allen will portray a befuddled King while Trevor Jones, who portrays the wandering prince, will dance alternately with Isabella MacIsaac and Bethany Nichols in the lead role of the oldest sister. Maria Panuccio portrays the hysterical youngest sister who is swept off her feet by the young prince, danced by Jerry Dischiavo. The cast of 70 dancers from the Ballet Program and several guest dancers are costumed in designs by Yelena Dosheva. Soloists Hannah Straney and Elizabeth Andrews will be partnered by guest dancer, Matthew Sparks, in Paquita, a timeless classical ballet excerpt with elegant Diva choreography by Kathy Ryan. choreography with a Spanish Dancers clockwise from left: Hannah Hage, Andrea Ashcroft, Lauren Pugh flair staged by Nancy Long and Lynn Bollana. Demi-soloists Angela Mia Belmonte, Anna McEvoy-Melo and Amanda Thomas are joined by Andrea Ashcroft, Alyssa Brown, Katherine Elacqua, Chloe Ford, Hannah Hage, Lauren Pugh and Dajana Vidovic.
Tickets are $8 and can be obtained at the dance studio or at the door. For information contact the School of Art, 797-8260 or the dance studio, 797-0000 ext. 2208.
Twelve Dancing Princesses choreographed by Nancy Long Dancers clockwise from top left: Rachel Petrie, Cassie Bushey, Riya Burke, Isabella MacIsaac, Bethany Nichols, Emma Zulch, Sara Zarnoch, Tatyana Carrillo, Madison Cook, Maria Panuccio, Raquel Heras, Brianna Aponte
MUSEUM EDUCATION PROGRAMS Wednesday May 9, noon
Gallery Talk
Art in the Twenty-First Century, New Season 6 “History” (60 mins.)
First Friday Shorts Meet in the Edward Wales Root Sculpture Court Free and Open to the Public
Marina Abramović, Glenn Ligon, Mary Reid Kelley
Learn more about the permanent collection and special exhibitions with these short, 15-minute talks in the galleries.
Friday, May 4, 1:10 p.m.
Cast with Style, a 19th-century Garden Bench Anna T. D’Ambrosio, Museum of Art Director and Chief Curator Next Month Friday, June 1, 1:10 p.m. Preview: Shadow of the Sphinx Easton Pribble Room
Art and Yoga For Mind, Body and Spirit Marina Abramović. The Artist Is Present, 2010. Performance, 3 Months. The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Photo: Marco Anelli (for The Museum of Modern Art, New York). Courtesy the Marina Abramović Archives. © Marina Abramović.
Saturdays May 5, 19, 26 and June 2, 9, 16, 23 10:30 to 11:45 a.m. Register for all seven classes: $50 MWPAI members; $75 general public (Normally $45/$65 for six classes) Drop-in fee per class: $10 MWPAI members; $15 general public Meet in the Edward Wales Root Sculpture Court
Wednesday May 16, noon
Art in the Twenty-First Century, New Season 6 “Balance” (60 mins.)
All levels of ability are welcome. Wear comfortable clothing and bring your own yoga mat. For more information, contact the Museum Education Department at 315-797-0000, extension 2158.
Artists Rackstraw Dawnes, Robert Mangold, Sarah Sze Robert Mangold. Split Ring Image 1, 2009. Acrylic, graphite and black pencil on canvas; 96 inches diameter. Private collection. Photo: G. R. Christmas. Courtesy The Pace Gallery, New York. © 2012 Robert Mangold, member Artist Rights Society (ARS).
Time for Tots: Story and Art Olivia by Ian Falconer Thursday, May 10, 10:30 a.m. Saturday, May 26, 1:30 p.m. Art Odyssey Interactive Gallery Free and Open to the Public Children and their adult companions are invited to join us each month on a Thursday morning or Saturday afternoon to listen to the story of the month read by a museum docent, visit the galleries to look at art that connects with the story, and participate in some fun activities. Recommended for children ages 3 to 5.
May Book Group Selection Pictures at an Exhibition by Sara Houghteling Discussion Date: Thursday, May 17, 6 to 8 p.m. Facilitated by Deborah Pokinski Associate Professor of Art History and Art History Chair, Hamilton College Museum of Art Free and Open to the Public A limited number of books are available for purchase at the MWPAI Gift Gallery. Registration is requested, but not required, by contacting the Museum Education Department at 797-0000, extension 2158.
June Dates Grandpa Green by Lane Smith
A sweeping sensuous novel of a son’s quest to recover his family’s lost masterpieces, looted by the Nazis during the occupation.
Thursday, June 7, 10:30 a.m. Saturday June 9, 1:30 p.m.
July 21 Book Group Selection Clara and Mr. Tiffany by Susan Vreeland
LunchArt Video Series
Bus Trip
ART 21: Art in the Twenty-First Century, New Season Six
New York City
Select Wednesdays at noon Easton Pribble Conference Room Free and Open to the Public Bring your lunch, refreshments served $3 Suggested Admission
Wednesday, May 23, 6 a.m. $56 MWPAI members; $66 general public Purchase tickets online at www.mwpai.org or through the Ticket Office at 797-0055.
Over the past decade, Art21 has established itself as the preeminent chronicler of contemporary art and artists through its Peabody Award-winning biennial television series, Art in the Twenty-First Century. The nonprofit organization has used the power of digital media to introduce millions of people of all ages to contemporary art and artists and has created a new paradigm for teaching and learning about the creative process.
Free time in New York City before the summer heat! Visit your favorite museums and galleries, shop, take in a show or whatever your favorite thing to do in New York happens to be. Bus arrives in New York between 10:30 and 11 a.m. and departs for Utica at 7 p.m.
Support for museum education programs is provided by the New York State Council on the Arts, a state agency.
State of the Arts
NYSCA
Saga of Star-Crossed Lovers Gets Silly Treatment For Kids and Families
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ne of the world’s most well known stories gets a hilarious retelling as The “Nearly World Famous” DuffleBag Theatre returns to the For Kids and Families series with their version of Romeo and Juliet 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. Saturday, May 5 in the Museum of Art Auditorium. DuffleBag will retell the classic Shakespearean love story with their trademarked wit and humor and just when the audience becomes enthralled by the story, children (and maybe even a parent) are asked to come up on stage and join in the action. This unpredictable performance is always a hilarious experience for all ages and a truly unique interactive theatrical experience where classic tales come to life! Admission for MWPAI members is $8; general admission is $10. Tickets may be purchased in advance or one hour prior to the performance time at the MWPAI Performing Arts Ticket Office, 797-0055 or 800-754-0797. Tickets may also be purchased online at www.mwpai.org.
Series Sponsor:
Sponsored by:
Russian Composers Highlighted in Keyboard Conversations
Special Preview Events Shadow of the Sphinx: Ancient Egypt and Its Influence
Aida and the Sphinx Then and Now Art Talk and Opera Thursday, June 7, 7 p.m. $20 Admission Ticket Office: 797-0055 or online at mwpai.org. Tickets go on sale May 1. Anna T. D’Ambrosio, Director and Chief Curator, Museum of Art, Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute, previews the exhibition Shadow of the Sphinx: Ancient Egypt and Its Influence opening June 17. Francesca Zambello, the Glimmerglass Festival’s Artistic & General Director introduces the 2012 season. Glimmerglass Young Artists with highlights from Verdi’s Costume Design: Bibhu Mohapartra©2011 Opera Aida.
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effrey Siegel concludes this season’s Keyboard Conversations series with a performance entitled Russian Rapture: Rachmaninoff and Tchaikovsky 8 p.m. Saturday, May 12 in the Museum of Art Auditorium.
Siegel will perform the soaring melodies and sumptuous sonorities of these ever-popular composers - the colorful Preludes, captivating Etudes, and the scintillating Humoresques. Admission for MWPAI members is $30; general admission is $35; student tickets are $15. For tickets contact the Performing Arts Ticket Office at 797-0055 or 800-754-0797. Tickets are also available online at www.mwpai.org.
Series Sponsor: Dr. Cynthia Parlato-Hurd, Dr. Kenneth Novak and Dr. Douglas Hurd M.O.R.E Members-Only Receptions and Events M.O.R.E
Members-Only Private Gallery Tour with Renowned Egyptologist Saturday June 16, 1 p.m. Peter Lacovara, Ph.D., Egyptologist, Curator of Ancient Egyptian, Nubian and Near Eastern Art, Michael C. Carlos Museum, Emory University, Atlanta Museum Galleries $25 MWPAI Members Purchase tickets online at www.mwpai.org or through the Ticket Office at 797-0055. Get a special preview of the Shadow of the Sphinx exhibition with Egyptologist Dr. Peter Lacovara, advisor and curator for the ancient Egyptian material selected for the exhibition. Refreshments follow. Space is limited.
Sidewalk Art Show 2 0 1 2 Friday, June 29 through Wednesday, July 4 Entries for the Sidewalk Art Show will be accepted June 1 and 2. A call for entries for the Sidewalk Art Show is available online at mwpai.org or at the information desk in the Museum of Art.
No calls for entries will be mailed.
Rare Peale Painting Loaned to Museum press that he radically altered the work and renamed it The Dream of Love. In Western art history there are several illustrious paintings that depict Jupiter rapturously embracing the beautiful river goddess Io. In 1855, five years before his death, Peale lamented in the journal Crayon that his revised interpretation of this mythological story provided him “some reputation, and sufficient profit; but being sold a few years after, it was destroyed by fire from the carelessness of the exhibitor, in Broadway [New York City].” Unfortunately, no image of what the picture looked like has yet been found.
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everal early 19th-century American artists painted idealized female nudes that they justified for public display by giving the works moralizing titles drawn from classical mythology, the Jewish or Christian bibles, or secular literature and poetry. This intriguing painting of a winsome female nude, loaned to the Museum from a private collection in honor of the Museum’s 75th anniversary, was attributed in 1994 by the art historian Carol E. Soltis to the renowned Philadelphia portrait and history painter Rembrandt Peale (17781860). The painting, displayed for what might possibly be the first time in a public art museum, offers a tantalizing but presently incomplete view of Peale’s quest for notoriety and financial gain with eroticized subject matter.
Another fancy piece that Peale painted at the end of his career, titled Musidora (after the nymph that represents summer in James Thomson’s 1730 poem, The Seasons) also may have depicted During the conservation treatment a female nude, but this work was undertaken on this picture shortly also destroyed in a fire at a combefore being attributed to mercial art gallery in Philadelphia late in 1850 or early in 1851. Historical Rembrandt Peale, it was discovered that the work’s original nude figure exhibition records indicate that had subsequently been painted Attrib. to Rembrandt Peale (American, 1778-1860), A Nude (“Musidora”? or “The Peale displayed what must have over, probably later in the 19th cen- Dream of Love”?), ca. 1845. Oil on canvas, 26-7/8 x 31-3/4 in. Anonymous loan in been yet another version of tury, by a diaphanous blouse and honor of the Museum of Art’s 75th Anniversary Musidora in a public exhibition that green skirt. The unknown artist who took place in Detroit in 1853, but that painting is now lost. The titles of “clothed” the figure also covered the red cloth under the figure’s right arm other works that Peale is known to have painted suggest that one or with a darker color and added a grape vine in her left hand. The original more of them might also have depicted female nudes; however, none of painting reappeared after these later modifications were removed. these paintings has been identified. Future research may determine Carol Soltis has noted that this work is an example of the kind of sentiwhether the painting currently on display at the Museum is the lost mental work, usually medium in size, and referred to in the 18th and early Detroit Musidora, or another of Peale’s later fancy pictures or even, per19th century as a “fancy picture,” that Peale painted from time to time, haps, a late-career repainting on a smaller scale of his notorious The chiefly during the last two decades of his life. More significantly, accordDream of Love. The publication of this painting for the first time ever in ing to Soltis, this painting is the only known example of Peale’s careerthe Institute’s Bulletin will give the picture wider circulation and, hopefully, long interest in painting pictures of female nudes. help to resolve some of the questions presently surrounding this work. In 1815, his erotic, life-size figure painting of the mythological lovers Jupiter and Io provoked such vituperation in the Baltimore, Maryland,
Film Series Titles Available Online and By Phone Titles will be announced as they become available on our website at mwpai.org/films, Facebook (fb.mwpai.org) or by phone 797-0055, option 3. Become a part of our Film Series email list to receive the latest updates by contacting rfrable@mwpai.org. Advertisements will also appear on the last Monday of each month in the Observer-Dispatch. We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause, however, this helps ensure that you are presented with only the latest and finest films.
Films are shown on Wednesdays and Fridays at 2 and 7:30 p.m. All films are shown in 35mm format, with a state-of-the-art Dolby surround sound system. Comfortable seats give every patron an unobstructed view of our large screen. Admission for Matinee screenings is $7 general admission and $5 for MWPAI Members. Admission for Evening screenings is $8 general admission and $6 for MWPAI Members. Admission for students with valid identification is $4 at all screenings. Tickets are on sale 30 minutes prior to each screening. Film Passbooks for discounted admission to 10 screenings are available for MWPAI members for $45 and General Admission for $60. For information call the MWPAI State of the Arts Performing Arts Ticket Office, 797-0055, 800754-0797. This series is made possible with public funds from the New York State Council on the Arts, a state agency.
Lead Corporate Sponsor: Adirondack Financial Services
Sponsored by: The Arthur Foundation
NYSCA
MWPai MixErs
Friday, May 4 The al nathan Band
Friday, May 25 Johnson & Company
5:30 to 8:30 p.m. Fountain Elms Terrace Cash Bar and hors d’ oEuvrEs By a MovEaBlE FEasT By o’ Connor’ s
MusT
BE ovEr
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FrEE To MEMBErs $5 GEnEral PuBliC
sponsored by GPo Federal Credit union Media sponsors: Mix 102.5 • Wour 96.9
(315) 797-0000 ext. 2104 • www.mwpai.org
Student Art Pratt MWP Annual Exhibition
School of Art
Upstate New York Campus at Munson-Williams-Proctor
Community
ARTS education
EXHIBITION
Juried works by PrattMWP Sophomores
May 12 through July 4 Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute Museum of Art
Reception: Fountain Elms Terrace Saturday, May 12, 1 to 3 p.m. 310 Genesee Street, Utica New York 797-0000 www.mwpai.org
On View May 11 through July 4 Reception Friday, May 11, 7 p.m. Museum of Art Edward Wales Root Sculpture Court
Annual PrattMWP Logo Sale at the Campus Store Friday, April 29 through Friday May 13
All PrattMWP Logo Products Will Be 25% OFF Sale Includes Hooded Sweatshirts • Jersey Pants • T-Shirts Thermal T’s Long Sleeve • Fleece Pull-Over Jackets Two-Toned Baseball Style Shirts • Sweat Pants Knitted Hats • Lanyards • Pencils • Paintbrush Pens Ceramic Coffee Mugs • Stainless Steel Travel Mugs Flyer Saucers • Bumper and Static Stickers Carabiners • Portfolios • Equipment Carriers No Additional Discounts Apply
Mother's Day Specials at the Gift Gallery Mother's Day is Sunday, May 13 In Honor of Mother's Day the Gift Gallery Will Offer 25% Off 35% Off for Members On A Selection of Fine Enameled Jewelry 15% Off 25% Off for Members On All Non-Consignment Floral-Themed Merchandise
Campus Store Hours
Consignment items are excluded from this promotion.
Monday - Friday 11:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Sale starts Tuesday, May 1 through Sunday, May 13
The Campus Store will be closing after Friday, May 13. Limited hours of operation will be offered during the summer months.
May Gift Gallery Hours
Stock Up Now For Your Summer Art Supply Needs!
Closed Monday Tuesday - Saturday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday - 1 to 5 p.m.
WELCOME NEW MEMBERS (and renewing members providing additional support at higher levels)
Leader
Sustainer
Cathedral Corporation • Marianne & Peter Gaige The M & T Bank Charitable Foundation • Alissa Viti National Grid • Alicia Dicks • Kenneth Tompkins Sturges Manufacturing • Richard R. Griffith • Tyler Griffith
Utica First Insurance • Richard Zick
Fountain Elms Society
Family/Household
Dr. William L. Boyle, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Michael Damsky James Frederick & Vige Barrie Richard & Constance Griffith George A. Hambrecht Dr. Cynthia J. Parlato-Hurd & Dr. Douglas H. Hurd Thomas Kirkpatrick, CEO, CRM Rental Management Steven & Monica Kowalsky Mrs. F.X. Matt II Dr. Nancy A. Shaheen & Kirk A. Evans
Mr. & Mrs. Frederick C. Degen Laura & Mike O'Shaughnessy Vincent J. Rossi, Esq. Rita A. Sator Dr. Gregory B. Shankman Jill & Tom Spellman Eleanor W. Wertimer
Tracy Bach & John Humphreys John Bennett Donald & Beverly Cantwell William & Mrs. Cole Gabriella & Thomas Curnow Patrick & Jessica Gorton Gail Grimaldi & Dolores Grimaldi Subash & Madhu Gupta David & Judy Husted Mr. & Mrs. David W. Hughes Joyce Jacobowitz & Amy Thrasher Timothy & Donna Kohlbrenner Susan & Jerry Korosec Luke & Micky Lucas Herbert & Frances Meinking Kate & Matt Miller Family of Richard Motto Janice Murray & Matt Wagner Robin & Richard O'Brien Douglas & Deborah Ouderkirk Judy Palitti Stephen & Nancy Pattarini Lisa & David Philipson Karen & Luca Ruggiero Mr. & Mrs. Carl E. Snitzer Robert & Mary Lou Thall
Contributor
Individual
Pamela Bush Joanne DeStefano William & Linda Doescher James C. Humphrey JoAnn Longo Barbara Martin Onno Oerlemans & Sally Cockburn Mark & Lee Pavach Joan & Ted Rajchel Daniel & Rebecca Robbins Laurel Saville & John Lecky Anthony & Teresa Scalzo Mr. & Mrs. Robert Sossen John & Madeline Stephenson
Marguerite M. Alofs Cindy Debernardis Erika C. Heintz Christina Hopkins Tiernan Hotaling Sandra Hynes Lee Ingraham Dennis Kininger Stuart Lever Paul MacArthur Melinda Marley Constance J. Marson Christine Mergenthaler Lesley Paul John G. Peppenelli Jeffrey Reynolds Kenneth Shilkret Ron Thiele
President’s Circle Dr. John H. Hobika Lynn & Thomas Rogers
Patron
Affiliate
310 Genesee Street Utica, New York 13502
Golden Artist Colors • Mark & Barbara Golden
Colleague Family of Dr. Mark Blaker
Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute Information and Hours Museum Hours (including Fountain Elms): Tues.-Sat. 10 a.m.-5p.m., Sun. 1-5 p.m. Performing Arts Ticket Office Hours: Mon.Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., one hour before performances and 30 minutes before films. Phone: 797-0055 or 1-800-754-0797 Art Odyssey: Interactive Gallery Hours: Tues.-Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. 1-5 p.m., School of Art Gallery Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m., Sat. 9 a.m.-noon. Library: Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sat. noon-5 p.m. For information, call (315) 797-0000 (Voice and TDD) General program support for the Museum of Art, performing arts and film presentations is made possible with public funds from the New York State Council on the Arts, a state agency.
Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute is a fine arts center serving diverse audiences through three program divisions— Museum of Art, Performing Arts, and School of Art. The Institute also offers art reference and music libraries, an active membership program, a Gift Gallery, and outstanding rental facilities ideal for public programs and private events. Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute 310 Genesee Street Utica, New York 13502 Telephone (315) 797-0000 Fax (315) 797-5608 www.mwpai.org Free Parking
M AY E V E N T S 2 Wednesday
10 Thursday
16 Wednesday
24 Thursday
Film Series Phone 797-0055 or visit mwpai.org 2 and 7:30 p.m., Auditorium.
Time for Tots: Story and Art 10:30 a.m., Art Odyssey Interactive Gallery.
Annual Spring Dance Concert: Jazz 7:30 p.m., Wellin Hall, Hamilton College.
4 Friday
11 Friday
LunchArt Video Art 21 Season 6; Balance Noon, Easton Pribble Conference Room.
First Friday Shorts: Gallery Talk Cast with Style, a 19th-century Garden Bench 1:10 p.m., Museum of Art.
Film Series Phone 797-0055 or visit mwpai.org 2 and 7:30 p.m., Auditorium.
Film Series Phone 797-0055 or visit mwpai.org 2 and 7:30 p.m., Auditorium.
Film Series Phone 797-0055 or visit mwpai.org 2 and 7:30 p.m., Auditorium.
PrattMWP Graduation 6 p.m., Edward Wales Root Sculpture Court.
17 Thursday
MWPAI Mixer Music by Johnson & Company 5:30 p.m., Fountain Elms Terrace.
Film Series Phone 797-0055 or visit mwpai.org 2 and 7:30 p.m., Auditorium. MWPAI Mixer Music by The Al Nathan Band 5:30 p.m., Fountain Elms Terrace.
5 Saturday Art and Yoga 10:30 a.m., Museum Galleries. For Kids and Families Dufflelbag Theatre, Romeo and Juliet 11 a.m. and 1 p.m., Auditorium.
9 Wednesday
Exhibition and Reception PrattMWP Sophomore Show Reception, Edward Wales Root Sculpture Court 7 p.m., on view through July 4, Museum of Art.
12 Saturday School of Art Exhibition and Reception: Community Arts Education Program Reception, Fountain Elms Terrace, 1 to 3 p.m., on view through July 4, Otto Meyer Galleries.
LunchArt Video Art 21 Season 6: History Noon, Easton Pribble Conference Room.
Keyboard Conversation Russian Rapture: Rachmaninoff and Tchaikovsky 8 p.m., Auditorium.
Film Series Phone 797-0055 or visit mwpai.org 2 and 7:30 p.m., Auditorium.
13 Sunday Second Sunday Guided Tour 2 p.m., Edward Wales Root Sculpture Court.
Book Discussion Pictures at an Exhibition 6 p.m. Easton Pribble Conference Room.
18 Friday Film Series Phone 797-0055 or visit mwpai.org 2 and 7:30 p.m., Auditorium.
25 Friday
Annual Spring Dance Concert: Ballet 7:30 p.m., Wellin Hall, Hamilton College.
26 Saturday Art and Yoga 10:30 a.m., Museum Galleries.
19 Saturday Art and Yoga 10:30 a.m., Museum Galleries.
Time for Tots: Story and Art 1:30 p.m., Art Odyssey Interactive Gallery.
23 Wednesday Bus Trip: New York City 6 a.m. to midnight, preregistration required.
Annual Spring Dance Concert: Ballet 7:30 p.m., Wellin Hall, Hamilton College.
Film Series Phone 797-0055 or visit mwpai.org 2 and 7:30 p.m., Auditorium.
30 Wednesday Film Series Phone 797-0055 or visit mwpai.org 2 and 7:30 p.m., Auditorium.
Annual Spring Dance Concert: Jazz 7:30 p.m., Wellin Hall, Hamilton College.
The following areas are accessible to the physically challenged: Museum of Art galleries, Auditorium and Sculpture Court, Art Odyssey: Interactive Gallery, Gift Gallery, Art Reference and Music Libraries, Performing Arts Office, School of Art Gallery, Studio D, Pottery Studio, the Academic Center and Student Center.