Arts&Culture
PURCHASE COLLEGE
VISUAL ARTS
Fall 2016 Events Calendar
C
CO N T E N T S
Exhibitions PAGE 1
Lectures PAGE 15
New Media PAGE 15 Humanities PAGE 16 Sciences PAGE 18
Performances PAGE 20
Dance PAGE 20 Music PAGE 23 Theatre PAGE 36
Calendar PAGE 40
Ticket Information PAGE 4 4
Cover: Andy Warhol Uncle Sam 1981 (detail) From the portfolio Myths 1981 Silkscreen with diamond dust on two-ply Lennox Museum Board 38” x 38” Collection Neuberger Museum of Art Purchase College, SUNY Gift of Steven W. Bryan 1982.17.01.04 @The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. Photo: Jim Frank
Founded in 1967 by Governor Nelson Rockefeller as the “cultural gem” of the State University of New York, Purchase College enjoys an outstanding international reputation for delivering a liberal education that emphasizes inquiry through direct engagement with the arts, letters, media, and sciences. In addition to our distinguished academic programs, the college is home to the Neuberger Museum of Art, which is celebrated internationally with modern, contemporary, and African art, and The Performing Arts Center, where many of the events listed in this calendar are staged. We invite the larger community to join us for performances by our students, and by the acclaimed artists, lecturers, performers, and scholars we welcome to Purchase College. Unless otherwise noted, the events listed in this publication are free of charge. For tickets to events in The Performing Arts Center and the Neuberger Museum of Art, please refer to the guide on page 44. We look forward to sharing the arts and culture of Purchase with you.
Landed: Surveying New Geographies On view until October 2 Open Tuesday–Sunday, 12–5pm and Wednesdays, 12–8pm Neuberger Museum of Art Admission information page 44 Landed: Surveying New Geographies is organized by the Neuberger Museum of Art, Purchase College, SUNY and curated by Jacqueline Shilkoff, Curator of New Media and Director of Digital Initiatives. Generous support for this exhibition has been provided by Donna and Marvin Schwartz. Additional support has been provided by ArtsWestchester, with support from the Westchester County Government, the Friends of the Neuberger Museum of Art, and the Purchase College Foundation.
EXHIBITIONS
Landed: Surveying New Geographies features artists using unconventional research methodologies and experimental media to contextualize the sociopolitical and cultural factors that determine the demarcation of land, its occupation, use, and succession. They are pioneering a cartography of engagement and activism, building a geography that encompasses environmental encroachment, the flow of refugees across borders, the points of access to resources and infrastructure, and the rights to ancestral grounds. Artists in the exhibition include Lewis Baltz, Ingrid Burrington, Hock E Aye Vi Edgar Heap of Birds, Jan Henle, Louis Hock, Ekene Ijeoma and Hyperakt, Shimpei Takeda, Bradley McCallum and Jacqueline Tarry, and Georgi and Nina Tushev.
Photo: Jim Frank
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Destination: Latin America On view until January 22, 2017 Open Tuesday–Sunday, 12–5pm and Wednesdays, 12–8pm Neuberger Museum of Art Admission information page 44 Destination: Latin America is organized by the Neuberger Museum of Art, Purchase College, State University of New York, and curated by Patrice Giasson, the Alex Gordon Associate Curator of Art of the Americas, with the curatorial assistance of Marianelly Neumann, and research assistance of Annabel Rhodeen and Carmelita Diaz. Generous support for this exhibition has been provided by the Friends of the Neuberger Museum of Art and the Purchase College Foundation.
Neuberger Museum of Art Free with Museum Admission See page 44
EXHIBITIONS
The Neuberger Museum of Art’s Latin American collection offers a multifaceted, didactic journey through twentieth and twenty-first century Latin American art. Destination: Latin America includes works by artists affiliated with the Mexican Renaissance following the Mexican Revolution; by key South American artists exploring color, form, space, and motion; by Caribbean and South American artists inspired by African art, Surrealism, and Magical Realism; and by other contemporary figures looking at themes of history, globalization, migration, and social criticism. This exhibition features works by Manuel Álvarez Bravo, Raúl Anguiano, Julio Antonio, Henry Bermudez, Leda Catunda, Carlos Cruz-Diez, José Luis Cuevas, Arturo Duclos, Lucio Fontana, Carlos Garaicoa, Florencio Gelabert, Alfred Jensen, Nicolás de Jesús, Wifredo Lam, Eduardo Mac Entyre, Teresa Margolles, María Martínez-Cañas, Roberto Matta, Almir Mavignier, José Clemente Orozco, Marta María Perez Bravo, Betsabeé Romero, Jesús Rafael Soto, Gerardo Suter, Rufino Tamayo, Luis Tomasello, and Eugenia Vargas.
GALLERY TALKS: WITH CURATOR PATRICE GIASSON
Wednesday, October 5, 12:30–1:30pm
WITH SCHOLAR MARIANELLY NEUMANN
Wednesday, December 7, 12:30–1:30pm
Examine key works from the exhibition, tracing the impact of the Mexican Revolution on contemporary Latin American artists and their responses to history, globalization, migration, and social criticism.
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EXHIBITIONS
Nicolás De Jesús En El Tran (In The Subway) 1990 Etching and aquatint on amate paper 45 from an edition of 75 15” x 10½” Collection Friends of The Neuberger Museum of Art Purchase College, SUNY Museum Purchase with funds provided by the Friends of The Neuberger Museum of Art El 01.2014.02
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Windgate Artist in Residence
EXHIBITIONS
Mike Rossi: An Original Miscellany On view: August 29– September 23 Reception: Tuesday, September 13 4:30–6pm Richard & Dolly Maass Gallery Visual Arts Building Open: Monday–Friday 10am–5pm Tuesday, September 13, 4:30pm Richard & Dolly Maass Gallery
An Original Miscellany is a presentation of forged steel sculpture and furniture, a mixture of interests and intents. By exploring his objective memory of tools, artifacts and implements, Rossi is building a material language. Combining and refiguring the almost-familiar, these works evoke use, intuition, and recollection.
GALLERY CONVERSATION: MIKE ROSSI AND GLENN ADAMSON
Glenn Adamson is a writer, critic and most recently Director of the Museum of Art and Design. The Windgate Artist in Residence Program at the School of Art+Design, Purchase College is an ongoing residency in applied design. The program is designed to advance the careers of practicing artists, to prepare students as professional artists, and to strengthen awareness of the significance of applied design. For information go to www/purchase.edu/AIR.
Mass Effect #12, 2016 Forged steel, 18 x 20” Photo: Mike Rossi
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Post No Bills: Public Walls as Studio and Source
EXHIBITIONS
On view: September 11– December 23 Open Tuesday–Sunday, 12–5pm and Wednesdays, 12–8pm Neuberger Museum of Art Admission information page 44 This exhibition is organized by the Neuberger Museum of Art, Purchase College, State University of New York, and curated by Avis Larson, Assistant Curator. Support for this exhibition has been provided by ArtsWestchester with support from the Westchester County Government. Additional support has been provided by the Friends of the Neuberger Museum of Art and by the Purchase College Foundation. José Parlá Blooming City Marks, 2014 Acrylic, ink, plaster and enamel on canvas Support: 72 x 108 inches inches (182.88 x 274.32 cm) Collection Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, New York Gift of Mrs. Georgia M. G. Forman, by exchange, Charles Clifton Fund, by exchange and Charles Clifton and James G. Forsyth Funds, by exchange, 2014 © 2016 José Parlá Photo: Tom Loonan
Urban walls hold the history of a place. In our daily lives, we often pass them by unnoticed. For the artists in Post No Bills: Public Walls as Studio and Source, however, the beauty of decaying walls serves as an inspiration that informs their work. This multimedia group exhibition features seven international artists who explore a contemporary archaeological aesthetic, making art on urban walls in which the wall itself becomes an integral part of the work. They often search for a particular surface, location, or history that directly speaks to them, places where the interaction between individuals and materials accumulate to create new meaning. The exhibition examines the fluid history of walls that have been layered with paint, posters, and different narratives over time and considers the ways in which artists move between the studio and the street. Artists BLU (Senigallia, Italy), Mark Bradford (Los Angeles), Burhan Dogançay (Turkey), José Carlos Martinat (Lima, Peru), José Parlá (Miami), JR (Paris), Robin Rhode (Cape Town), Vhils a.k.a. Alexandre Farto (Portugal), and Jacques Villeglé (Quimper, France) are each contributing to and capturing this unique and public narrative. The exhibition is accompanied by a fully-illustrated catalogue.
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Wednesday, September 28 12:30–2:30pm Neuberger Museum of Art Study Free with Museum Admission See page 44
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SCREENING: MEGUNICA
EXHIBITIONS
Join award-winning Italian filmmaker, Lorenzo Fonda, for a special screening and conversation about his film, Megunica, which follows the muralist and animator BLU through Mexico, Guatemala, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, and Argentina.
EXHIBITIONS
Wednesday, October 26 12:30–2pm Neuberger Museum of Art Free with Museum Admission See page 44
POSTERS, POLITICS, AND POWER IN COMMUNIST CUBA: SCREENING AND DISCUSSION OF WRINKLES OF THE CITY
Artist-made documentary, Wrinkles of the City, follows JR and José Parlá as they collaborate in Cuba for the 2012 Havana Biennial. Following the screening, Elizabeth Guffey, Purchase College professor of art history and author of the book Poster: Paper in the Post-Digital Age, and Cuban artist Florencio Gelabert will discuss how JR and Parlá’s project builds off the poster tradition in Communist Cuba.
The Wrinkles of the City La Havana, Alfonso Ramón Fontaine Batista, Cuba, 2012
These programs are presented in conjunction with the museum’s exhibition Post No Bills: Public Walls as Studio and Source.
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Ray Spillenger:
EXHIBITIONS
Rediscovery of a Black Mountain Painter On view: September 11– December 23 Open Tuesday–Sunday, 12–5pm and Wednesdays, 12–8pm Neuberger Museum of Art Admission information page 44 Support for this exhibition has been provided by the Friends of the Neuberger Museum of Art and the Purchase College Foundation.
Ray Spillenger; Composition: White, Aqua, Yellow, c. 1951–54 Oil on canvas 27½ x 23½ inches Estate of Raymond Spillenger, WCO-06
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During the summer of 1948 Ray Spillenger studied with Willem de Kooning and Josef Albers at Black Mountain College. This exhibition, including over forty paintings and drawings dating from the artist’s Black Mountain College days to the late 1960s, reveals Spillenger’s deep commitment to abstraction and his passionate love of color. After leaving Black Mountain College, Spillenger moved to New York City where he became a member of “The Club,” a Cedar Tavern regular, and friend to Abstract Expressionist luminaries including Franz Kline, Jackson Pollock, and Philip Guston. Despite his contribution to the formation of the New York School, Spillenger did not find commercial or critical success. Ray Spillenger: Rediscovery of a Black Mountain Painter is the first exhibition to examine this unseen body of work and to assess the artist’s contribution to the history of mid-twentiethcentury American art. This exhibition has been organized by the Black Mountain College Museum + Arts Center and curated by Theodore E. Stebbins Jr., Curator of American Art, Emeritus, Harvard Art Museums.
Fall Family Day Saturday, October 1, 1–4pm Neuberger Museum of Art $10 Child Adults Free
EXHIBITIONS
The Neuberger Museum’s seasonal family festivals offer creative afternoons of exploration and experimentation for visitors of all ages. Our team of artists will guide visitors as they experiment with a wide range of media and techniques inspired by our artists and exhibitions. This event is generously sponsored by Neuberger Berman.
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Surface of Design On view: October 3–November 11 Opening Reception: Wednesday, October 5, 4:30pm Richard & Dolly Maass Gallery Visual Arts Building Open: Monday–Friday 10am–5pm
Participants include:
A Practice for Everyday Life Cory Arcangel Antoine Catala Eyebodega Karel Martens Metahaven Maureen Mooren Our Polite Society Verso Books
Prix de Rome identity by Our Polite Society, 2015
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EXHIBITIONS
Taking its name from a seminal essay by the critic and philosopher Jacques Rancière, this exhibition considers the question of surface in relation to contemporary graphic design. Beyond divisions between the poetic and the professional, or the modern and postmodern, “the flat surface,” Rancière reminds us, “was always a surface of communication where words and images slid into one another.” Curated by designer and writer Mark Owens, Surface of Design thus brings together select historical objects and work by contemporary artists and designers to probe a number of interrelated material practices, including wallpaper, supergraphics, and décor, as well as 3D printing and design for the surface of the computer screen. Between these various poles lies the printed page, and the exhibition will also consider how recent technological developments cast light on the notion of “the public” in publication. Taken together, the works in Surface of Design shed new light on graphic design as “a surface of communication” and ask what new forms of “communal life” might therefore be possible.
POP! Prints from the Permanent Collection
EXHIBITIONS
On view: October 30– February 19 Open Tuesday–Sunday, 12–5pm and Wednesdays, 12–8pm Neuberger Museum of Art Admission information page 44 This exhibition is organized by the Neuberger Museum of Art, Purchase College, State University of New York, and curated by Helaine Posner, Chief Curator. Support has been provided by the Friends of the Neuberger Museum of Art and the Purchase College Foundation.
This exhibition features significant Pop Art prints from the permanent collection of the Neuberger Museum of Art. On view are works by Jim Dine, Robert Indiana, Jasper Johns, Alex Katz, Nicholas Krushenick, Roy Lichtenstein, Richard Lindner, Claes Oldenburg, Mel Ramos, Robert Rauschenberg, Larry Rivers, James Rosenquist, Ed Ruscha, Andy Warhol, and Tom Wesselmann, dating from the 1960s–80s. Andy Warhol, Uncle Sam 1981 From the portfolio Myths 1981 Silkscreen with diamond dust on two-ply Lennox Museum Board, 38” x 38” Collection Neuberger Museum of Art Purchase College, SUNY Gift of Steven W. Bryan 1982.17.01.04 @The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. Photo: Jim Frank
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MFA Group Exhibition On view: December 1 – December 12 Opening Reception: Richard & Dolly Maass Gallery Visual Arts Building Open: Monday–Friday 10am–5pm
EXHIBITIONS
Featuring work from all first and second-year MFA students within the School of Art+Design, including: Timothy Atticus, Tal Beery, Kelsey Brod, D. Brian Burns II, Carmelita Diaz, Eliza Evans, Ashley Frato, Melinda Kiefer, Paul Clark Minor, Bridget McGuire, Zoey B. Scheler, Sam Spillman, Sophie Treppendahl, Gaku Tsutaja, and Charlotte Woolf.
Visiting Artist Lecture Series Wednesdays, 4:30pm Visual Arts Building, Room 1016
The School of Art+Design Visiting Artist Lecture Series brings to campus noted artists, curators, critics and historians who share their perspectives and expertise on their own work and provide insight into current issues facing the contemporary artist and designer.
Wednesday, August 31
MARC ANDRE ROBINSON
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EXHIBITIONS
Wednesday, September 14
PETER GALBERT
Wednesday, September 21
SETH TOBOCMAN
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EXHIBITIONS
Wednesday, September 28
LUMI TAN
Wednesday, October 12
ALEXI WORTH
Wednesday, October 19
KIMBERLY DREW
Wednesday, October 26
NITASHA DHILLON AND AMIN HUSAIN
Jack Whitten
Wednesday, November 9
JACK WHITTEN
Wednesday, November 16
CURTIS MITCHELL
Ann Agee
Wednesday, December 14 ANN AGEE 14
New Media Lecture Series
LECTURES
Ekene Ijeoma Wednesday, September 7 6:30pm Neuberger Museum of Art Study Event Ticket Information page 44
Ekene Ijeoma is a designer and programmer whose work explores the artistic and humanistic properties of data and algorithms through media, objects, and installations. Ijeoma discusses his piece The Refugee Project, an interactive website and installation contextualizing refugee migration around the world and is featured in the Neuberger Museum of Art exhibition Landed: Surveying New Geographies, for which new and updated data, visualizations, and narratives were produced.
Julie Martin Wednesday, November 2 6:30pm Neuberger Museum of Art Study Event Ticket Information page 44
Julie Martin is director of Experiments in Art and Technology (E.A.T.), the non-profit organization co-founded in 1966 in New York by artists Robert Rauschenberg and Robert Whitman and engineers Billy Klüver (Martin’s late husband) and Fred Waldhauer to encourage and facilitiate collaborations between artists and engineers. With Klüver and art historian Barbara Rose, Martin co-edited the book Pavilion about the Pepsi Pavilion, which was designed by E.A.T. for Expo ‘70 in Osaka, Japan. Martin collaborated with Klüver on articles on art and technology, including Working with Rauschenberg for the exhibition catalog published for Rauschenberg’s 1997 retrospective at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York.
Leah Buechley Wednesday, December 7 6:30pm Neuberger Museum of Art Study Event Ticket Information page 44 Each semester the New Media Program, School of Film and Media Studies, and the Neuberger Museum of Art co-host a series of lectures by accomplished artists, technologists, and theorists in the field of new media. This is a chance for students, as well as the broader campus community, to hear from and dialogue with new media pioneers and visionaries.
Leah Buechley is a designer, engineer, and educator whose work explores intersections and juxtapositions—of “high” and “low” technologies, new and ancient materials, and masculine and feminine making traditions. She is a leading developer in the fields of electronic textiles and paper electronics. Her inventions include the LilyPad Arduino. From 2009–2014, she was a professor at the MIT Media Lab where she founded and directed the HighLow Tech group. She has been an invited speaker at leading technology, art, and learning events including TED, ISEA, FabLearn, and SXSW. Her work has been exhibited internationally in venues including the Victoria and Albert Museum, the Ars Electronica Festival, and the Exploratorium. 15
Durst Distinguished Lecture Series
LECTURES
Claudia Rankine Thursday, September 22 4:30–6pm Humanities Theatre
A READING AND CONVERSATION
with the 2016–2017 Roy and Shirley Durst Distinguished Chair in Literature.
Claudia Rankine is the Frederick Iseman Professor of Poetry at Yale University and the author of five collections of poetry. Her most recent book, Citizen: An American Lyric (2014), won, among many other awards, the National Book Critics Circle Award in Poetry, the PEN Open Book Award, the NAACP Image Award, and the LA Times Book Award for poetry. Photo: John Lucas
Kristin Valdez Quade Justin Torres Monday, October 10 4:30–6pm Buffer Room Administration Building
Photo: Maggie Shipstad
Photo: Winni Wintermyer
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READINGS AND CONVERSATION
Kirstin Valdez Quade is the author of Night at the Fiestas, a collection of short stories that won the John Leonard Prize from the National Book Critics Circle as well as other awards. Her work has appeared in The New Yorker, Guernica, The Southern Review, and The Best American Short Stories. She is an assistant professor at Princeton University. Justin Torres is a graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop and a former Wallace Stegner Fellow at Stanford University. His first novel, We the Animals, has been translated into fifteen languages and received the VCU Cabell First Novelist Award. In 2012, the National Book Foundation named Torres one of its “5 Under 35.” He is an assistant professor of English at UCLA.
Alexander Chee Garth Greenwell Thursday, October 27, 4:30–6pm Library, 2nd Floor
Photo: M. Sharkey
LECTURES
READINGS AND CONVERSATION
Alexander Chee is the author of two novels: Edinburgh (2001), which won the Lambda Editor’s Choice Prize and the Asian American Writers Workshop Literature Award, and the recently published The Queen of the Night (2016). A graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, Chee is the winner of a 2003 Whiting Award, a 2004 NEA Fellowship in prose and a 2010 MCCA Fellowship, and residency fellowships from the MacDowell Colony, the VCCA, Civitella Ranieri, and Amtrak. Garth Greenwell is a graduate of Purchase College, SUNY and the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. His first novel, What Belongs to You, was published in 2016 by Farrar, Straus, & Giroux. He lives in Iowa City, where he holds the Richard E. Guthrie Memorial Fellowship at the University of Iowa.
Photo: Max Freeman
Claudia Rankine Alondra Nelson Wednesday, November 16, 6pm Brooklyn Historical Society 128 Pierrepont St., Brooklyn
IN CONVERSATION
Alondra Nelson is the dean of social science and professor of sociology at Columbia University. In 2016, she published The Social Life of DNA: Race, Reparations, and Reconciliation After the Genome with Beacon Press. As an interdiscipliary social scientist, her lectures, books, and articles explore the intersections of science, medicine and social inequality. Claudia Rankine is the 2016–2017 Roy and Shirley Durst Distinguished Chair in Literature
Photo: Bruce Gilbert The Durst Distinguished Lecture Series is made possible by the Roy and Shirley Durst Distinguished Chair in Literature Endowment.
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Natural Sciences Lecture Series
LECTURES
Paul Thibodeau Tuesday, September 13, 7pm Natural Sciences Building Room 1001
HOW METAPHOR SHAPES THOUGHT
In this lecture, Professor Thibodeau discusses how metaphors suffuse natural language and frame how we think about important social and political issues. Paul Thibodeau is an assistant professor of psychology at Oberlin College. His research explores when and how metaphor shapes thought, and what that reveals about the human mind. He received his Ph.D. in psychology from Stanford University and a B.A. in cognitive science from Swarthmore College.
Rene Almeling Tuesday, November 1, 7pm Natural Sciences Building Room 1001
GUYNECOLOGY: MEN, MEDICAL KNOWLEDGE, AND REPRODUCTION
Medical researchers have been making headlines with a surprising series of findings about men and reproduction. It turns out that the health status of men’s bodies prior to conception can directly affect the health of their children. This book project is motivated by the question: Why did it take so long for researchers to begin asking basic questions about how men matter for reproduction? Rene Almeling, associate professor of sociology and public health at Yale University, focuses on issues associated with gender and medicine. She examines questions about how biological bodies and cultural norms interact to influence scientific knowledge, medical markets, and individual experiences. These lectures were made possible by Con Edison, Inc., as part of the Science in the Modern World Program.
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John Howard Lecture on Law and Justice
LECTURES
Katherine Vockins Tuesday, October 4, 7pm Natural Sciences Building Room 1001
REHABILITATION THROUGH THE ARTS: CREATING BEHAVIOR CHANGE IN PRISON AND BEYOND
Katherine Vockins, founder and executive director of Prison Communities International and Rehabilitation Through The Arts (RTA), will talk about the value of arts in prison with formerly incarcerated alumni of its program from Sing Sing and Bedford Hills Correctional Facility. John Howard, professor emeritus of sociology, will introduce a variety of film clips from RTA’s theater and dance productions inside the prisons. This lecture is made possible by a generous contribution from Robert J. and Marilyn E. Timberger.
Starting Over, a devised theatre piece developed by RTA participants and performed at Sing Sing Correctional Facility. Photo: Rehabilitation Through The Arts
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Doug Varone and Dancers Saturday, November 5, 8pm The Performing Arts Center $35 / $55
Photo: Paula Lobo
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PERFORMANCES
Celebrating its 30th anniversary season, Doug Varone and Dancers has commanded attention around the globe for its expansive vision, versatility, and technical prowess. From the smallest gesture to full-throttle bursts of movement, Varone’s kinetically thrilling dances mine the complexity of the human spirit.
Purchase Dance Company
PERFORMANCES
Friday, December 9 Artist Talk 7:15pm Concert 8pm Saturday, December 10, 2pm & 8pm Sunday, December 11, 3pm The Performing Arts Center $20
The Conservatory of Dance proudly presents a thrilling Fall 2016 concert series featuring the Purchase Dance Company!
Tom Weinberger is the Fall 2016 Schusterman Artist-in-Residence. The goal of the Schusterman Visiting Artist program is to engage American audiences with Israeli artists of different disciplines and enable them to experience in depth a vibrant and creative face of Israel. The residency is supported by the Israel Institute, which is dedicated to enhancing knowledge and study of modern Israel.
Leading Israeli dance artist Tom Weinberger creates a new work that celebrates the inherent freedom of the body while innovative French-born choreographer Manuel Vignoulle premieres a new work that explores notions of home, self-discovery, and place. The program also features a re-staging of acclaimed contemporary ballet choreographer Norbert de la Cruz’s work Talsikan (2015). Finally, award winning Conservatory alumnus and faculty member Doug Varone premieres The Paradox of Prayer—a work created for Varone’s professional company along with fourteen students.
Photo: Christopher Duggan
With three stunning premieres and one fresh re-staging, the program showcases the dynamic range of our professional caliber students and reflects the Conservatory’s stature as a leading center for world-class dance training.
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The Hip Hop Nutcracker Thursday, December 15, 8pm The Performing Arts Center $52.50 / $42.50 / $32.50
Photo: ŠUnited Palace of Cultural Arts
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PERFORMANCES
A holiday mash-up for the whole family, The Hip Hop Nutcracker re-imagines Tchaikovsky’s classic score through explosive hip hop choreography. A dozen all-star dancers, on-stage DJ, and an electric violinist bring the traditional Nutcracker story to life in contemporary New York City. This full-length show celebrates love, community, and the magic of the holiday season.
The Goldberg Variations Demystified Wednesday, September 21 12:30–1:30pm Neuberger Museum of Art Event ticket information page 44
PERFORMANCES
Bradley Brookshire, associate professor at Purchase College’s Conservatory of Music and assistant conductor at The Metropolitan Opera, performs Bach’s ambitious and colorful set of variations on a two-manual harpsichord. In brief comments between variations, he lovingly debunks virtually everything you have ever heard about the piece. “Many have played the Goldberg Variations, but few with Brookshire’s imagination and brilliance.” (Seen and Heard International)
Bradley Brookshire, harpsichord
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PERFORMANCES
Joanna Gleason
From Campfire to Cabaret Thursday, October 6, 8pm The Performing Arts Center $42.50
Watch barriers between disciplines dissolve as Tony Award®-winning actress and Performing Arts Center Artistic Fellow Joanna Gleason leads students from Purchase College’s dance, theatre, jazz, and opera programs on the journey from “campfire to cabaret.” Drawing out personal narratives from a mix of intimate discussion, interactive demonstration, and hands-on activities, the evening’s journey will culminate in a performance of the story that they discover together.
Photo: Steven Mosher
Purchase Symphony Orchestra
Children’s Concert Friday, October 7, 7pm Recital Hall, Music Building
Bizet: Carmen Suite No. 1 Prokofiev: Peter and the Wolf John Williams: Medley from Star Wars James Undercofler, Conductor Join the Purchase Symphony Orchestra as they perform favorite pieces that audience members of all ages will love! The PSO is made up of students from the Conservatory of Music where every player is coached individually and jointly towards making each concert a memorable occasion.
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Jazz at the Center
PERFORMANCES
Piano Spectacular Saturday, October 8, 8pm The Performing Arts Center $62.50 / $52.50
Pianists: Bill Charlap, Gerald Clayton, Benny Green, Helen Sung Featuring special guests from Purchase College’s jazz faculty: Pete Malinverni, piano, Todd Coolman, bass, and Kenny Washington, drums The piano has been an integral part of the jazz idiom since its inception. A single piano can produce both melody and harmony—fill a stage with multiple pianos and magic starts to happen. This one-night-only event brings together four greats of the genre, plus special guests, for a jazz experience not to be missed. The evening is co-curated by Jon Faddis, professor and director of jazz performance at Purchase College and one of the most innovative and inspiring jazz trumpeters of our time, and Seth Soloway, interim director of The Performing Arts Center.
Black Violin Friday, October 14, 8pm The Performing Arts Center $47.50 / $37.50 / $27.50
Photo: Lisa Leone
Wilner “Wil B” Baptiste (viola) and Kevin “Kev Marcus” Sylvester (violin) are Black Violin, and they are on a perception-changing, stereotype-shattering mission. Classically trained musicians, they met as high school orchestra nerds; today they play genre-bending music, radically fusing hip hop and pop with classical to create a kaleidoscope of sounds uniquely their own.
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PERFORMANCES
Alumni Series
SoundMind Woodwind Quintet Wednesday, October 19, 8pm Recital Hall, Music Building
SoundMind is an innovative ensemble of five wind musicians, providing a home for music both new and familiar. Formed in 2016, SoundMind is Isabel Lepanto Gleicher (flute), Kemp Jernigan (oboe), Eric Christian Umble (clarinet), Patrick Jankowski (horn), and David Nagy (bassoon). In a program of music spanning centuries, from Gesualdo to Andriessen, SoundMind will showcase the kaleidoscopic and boundless possibilities of wind instruments.
Warsaw Philharmonic Friday, October 21, 8pm The Performing Arts Center $95 / $75 / $50
Weinberg: Polish Melodies No. 2, Op. 47 Beethoven: Piano Concerto No. 3, Op. 37,
C minor
Brahms: Symphony No. 2, Op. 73, D Major Jacek Kaspszyk, conductor, music and artistic director Seong-Jin Cho, piano soloist For over 100 years, the Warsaw Philharmonic has been one of Poland’s most distinguished musical institutions; this will be the Philharmonic’s first U.S. tour with Music and Artistic Director Jacek Kaspszyk.
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Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center
PERFORMANCES
Emerson String Quartet with David Finckel Saturday, October 22, 5pm The Performing Arts Center $60
The incomparable Emerson String Quartet, on the occasion its 40th anniversary season, celebrates with a selection of repertoire that has earned the ensemble its unrivalled nine Grammy Awards, delighted quartet aficionados the world over, and cemented its reputation as one of the greatest chamber ensembles of all time. They will be joined by acclaimed cellist and leading figure in the chamber music world, David Finckel.
Joshua Bell Sunday, October 30, 3pm The Performing Arts Center $97.50 / $87.50 / $62.50
Equally at home as a soloist, chamber musician, recording artist, and orchestra leader, Grammy winner Joshua Bell is one of the most celebrated violinists of our time. His restless curiosity, passion, and multi-faceted musical interests are almost unparalleled in the world of classical music. Joshua Bell will be accompanied by pianist Alessio Bax, known for his lyrical playing, insightful interpretations, and dazzling facility.
Photo: Phil Knott
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Purchase Percussion Ensemble Thursday, November 10, 8pm Recital Hall, Music Building
PERFORMANCES
Steve Reich: Nagoya Marimbas (1994) Dominic Donato: Plan B (2016) World Premiere Robert Paterson: Stealing Thunder (2000) Steve Reich: Drumming Part I (1971) Dominic Donato, Artistic Director
Faculty Chamber Concert Friday, November 11, 7pm Recital Hall, Music Building
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An evening featuring the talented faculty members from Purchase College’s Conservatory of Music performing a selection of best-loved classical pieces.
Soul Voices
PERFORMANCES
Goin’ Up Yonder! Wednesday, November 16, 7pm Recital Hall, Music Building
Pete Malinverni, Artistic Director Soul Voices celebrates the diverse and talented student body of Purchase College. Comprised of young people of various backgrounds, interests and major study areas, the singers in the group come together to experience and express to their audience the unity possible via the great and universal gift of the human voice.
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Purchase Contemporary Ensemble
PERFORMANCES
Steve Reich at 80 Thursday, November 17, 8:00pm Recital Hall, Music Building
Drumming Part I (1971) Vermont Counterpoint (1982) Eight Lines (1983) Nagoya Marimbas (1994) Cello Counterpoint (2003) Dominic Donato, Artistic Director This exciting concert honors American composer and local resident Steve Reich in celebration of his 80th birthday. The Purchase Contemporary Ensemble performs a varied selection of his works from the past 45 years.
Purchase Symphony Orchestra Friday, November 18, 7:00pm Recital Hall, Music Building
Nielsen: Clarinet Concerto, Op. 57 Brahms: Symphony No. 1 in C minor, Op. 68 Charles Neidich, Conductor DukHyun Sung, Clarinet This exciting concert features the winner of the Purchase College Concerto Competition, DukHyun Sung, performing Nielsen under the baton of the internationally recognized clarinetist and conductor Charles Neidich. Rounding out the program is Brahms’ First Symphony, which is inspired by Beethoven’s great Ninth Symphony.
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Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center
PERFORMANCES
Reflections Saturday, November 19, 5pm The Performing Arts Center $52.50
Beethoven: Sonata in E-flat major for Violin and Piano, Op. 12, No. 3 (1797–98) Mendelssohn: Quartet No. 2 in A minor for Strings, Op. 13 (1827) Bloch: “Nigun” (“Improvisation”) from
Baal shem, Three Pictures of Hassidic Life for Violin and Piano (1923) Prokofiev: Overture on Hebrew Themes for
Clarinet, String Quartet, and Piano, Op. 34 (1919)
Schoenfield: Trio for Clarinet, Violin, and Piano (1986) Anne-Marie McDermott, piano Ida Kavafian, violin Calidore String Quartet David Shifrin, clarinet
Camerata
The “Other” Four Seasons Wednesday, November 30, 12:30–1:30pm Neuberger Museum of Art Event ticket information page 44
Vivaldi’s set of four violin concertos known as The Four Seasons has achieved a lasting place in the repertoire; but there are other, less-wellknown concertos for strings that give those concertos some competition. The Purchase College Camerata presents four of its leading string players in a group of equally stellar, but lesser performed, concertos by Bach, Vivaldi, and their contemporaries that rival Vivaldi’s famous Seasons.
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Purchase Jazz Orchestra Thursday, December 1, 7pm Choral Hall, Music Building
PERFORMANCES
Todd Coolman & Jon Faddis, Artistic Directors The Purchase Jazz Orchestra is a 17-piece big band that performs jazz from every era. From staples by Ellington and Basie, to more modern works by today’s leading composers and arrangers such as McNeely, Clayton, Abene, and Schneider, the PJO swings. Grammy Award-winning jazz bassist Todd Coolman, and legendary trumpeter Jon Faddis direct the group.
Purchase New Music Thursday, December 1, 8pm Recital Hall, Music Building
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Dominic Donato, Artistic Director This concert features the next generation of composers at their best. Students of the Purchase College composition studio spend the semester refining pieces written specifically for the Purchase New Music Ensemble, which are as diverse and creative as they are exciting.
Orpheus Chamber Orchestra with Fazil Say
PERFORMANCES
Sunday, December 4, 3pm The Performing Arts Center $80 / $65 / $50
Rossini: Overture to La Scala di Seta
(“The Silk Ladder”)
Mozart: Piano Concerto No.21 in C major,
K.467
Say: Piano Concerto No. 2, op. 4 for piano and
string orchestra plus gong “Silk Road”
Haydn: Symphony No.83 in G minor, Hob.I:83
“La Poule” (“The Hen”)
Photo: Macie J. Zienkiewicz
Clever, compassionate, and unabashedly creative. Center favorites NYC-based Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, are now in their 5th decade and eternally without a conductor. The orchestra kicks off its annual concert series at The PAC with a musical soiree of luxury and levity, featuring Turkish pianist and composer Fazil Say, on the heels of his triumphant 2015 tour.
Purchase Latin Jazz Orchestra Wednesday, December 7, 8pm Choral Hall, Music Building
David DeJesus, Artistic Director The Purchase Latin Jazz Orchestra is an exciting ensemble that performs music from all over Latin America. Featuring top students from the Purchase College Conservatory of Music, the PLJO explores numerous genres including Mambo, Cha-Cha, Danzon, Festejo, and Porro.
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Purchase Opera
PERFORMANCES
Amahl and the Night Visitors Friday, December 9, 7pm Saturday, December 10, 1pm The Performing Arts Center $20
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Jacque Trussel, Director Hugh Murphy, Music Director and Conductor This opera by Gian Carlo Menotti is a favorite of children and adults throughout the world. It tells the story of the disabled boy Amahl and his mother, who live in poverty in Jerusalem. One night, three strangers appear at their door. They are the three kings, on their way to Bethlehem. What happens next is a miracle! The opera offers an insight into values and experiences—of love, sacrifice, and healing—that touch us all, regardless of faith.
Purchase Symphony Orchestra & Chorus
PERFORMANCES
Mozart Mass in C minor Sunday, December 11, 5pm The Performing Arts Center $20
David J. Recca, Conductor “As proof of my promise, the score of half a Mass for which I still have high hopes…lays half-finished on my desk.” These were the words of Mozart in 1783 to his ever-disapproving father, perhaps in hopes of some future reconciliation. The completion of this “half-finished” Mass would prove to be a promise Mozart would not live to fulfill. Featuring student soloists, the Purchase Symphony Orchestra and Purchase Chorus will come together to present musicologist Richard Levin’s well-researched and dramatic completion of this inspiring work.
The Rob Mathes Holiday Concert Friday, December 16, 8pm Saturday, December 17, 8pm The Performing Arts Center $75 / $50 / $40
Get ready to rock around the Christmas tree with the one and only Rob Mathes, now in his third decade of holiday performances at The Center. This annual celebration featuring Mathes, plus his all-star band and chorus is a high-energy evening of rock, jazz, and blues—original tunes and holiday classics that will put you in the spirit of the season.
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National Theatre Live The Performing Arts Center $20
PERFORMANCES
A View from the Bridge
By Arthur Miller Saturday, September 17, 8pm
One Man Two Guvnors
By Richard Bean Saturday, October 1, 3pm
The Deep Blue Sea
By Terrance Rattigan Sunday, October 16, 3pm
Frankenstein
By Nick Dear Based on the novel by Mary Shelley Sunday, November 13, 3pm Experience the best of British theatre, recorded live and rebroadcast in spectacular digital HD on the big screen in the PepsiCo Theatre.
Purchase Repertory Theatre
Middletown Friday, October 7, 7:30pm Saturday, October 8 1:30 & 7:30pm Wednesday, October 12, 7:30pm Thursday, October 13, 7:30pm Friday, October 14, 7:30pm Saturday, October 15 1:30 & 7:30pm The Performing Arts Center $20
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Written by Will Eno Directed by Devin Brain A postmodern dark comedy inspired by Thornton Wilder’s Our Town, this funny and moving play from the author of The Realistic Joneses depicts a small American town whose denizens are surprisingly articulate about their metaphysical anxiety.
Purchase Repertory Theatre
PERFORMANCES
Twelve Angry Jurors Friday, October 28, 7:30pm Saturday, October 29 1:30 & 7:30pm Wednesday, November 2 7:30pm Thursday, November 3, 7:30pm Friday, November 4, 7:30pm Saturday, November 5 1:30 & 7:30pm
Written by Reginald Rose Directed by Zenon Kruszelnicki The jury in a homicide trial must determine the fate of a teen accused of murdering his father. This classic play, reimagined for contemporary America, is a powerful and unforgettable legal drama about the meaning of citizenship and the tenuousness of justice.
The Performing Arts Center $20
Photo: Zoe Markwalter
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Theatre & Performance Program
PERFORMANCES
Apparition Friday, November 4, 7:30pm Saturday, November 5 1:30pm & 7:30pm Thursday, November 10, 7:30pm Friday, November 11, 7:30pm Saturday, November 12 1:30pm & 7:30pm Humanities Theatre $20
Written by Anne Washburn Directed by Rachel Dickstein Filled with writer Anne Washburn’s signature humor and linguistic adventurousness, the play is an eclectic modern masterpiece of the underknown. Deemed by critics as “Part gothic tale. Part urban legend. Part nineteenth-century drama. Part modern comedy,” the play underscores the Theatre & Performance program’s commitment to new experimental writing by women. Photo: Zoe Markwalter
L.A. Theatre Works
Judgment at Nuremberg Saturday, November 19, 8pm The Performing Arts Center $50 / $40
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Commemorating the 75th anniversary of World War II, LATW brings us one of the greatest courtroom dramas of the last century: Judgment at Nuremberg by Abby Mann. Ten actors portray the unforgettable characters, who are playing out a high stakes game against the backdrop of a looming Cold War, shifting political alliances, and the shocking and vivid memories of the Holocaust and World War II.
Purchase Repertory Theatre
PERFORMANCES
Seven Guitars Friday, December 2, 7:30pm Saturday, December 3, 1:30pm Thursday, December 8, 7:30pm Saturday, December 10, 7:30pm The Performing Arts Center $20
by August Wilson Directed by A. Dean Irby The personal conflicts leading to the murder of a rising jazz guitarist create an incisive portrait of African-American life in the 20th century— and today. One of Wilson’s greatest achievements, it captures the joy, fragility, music, and pain of existence itself.
Photo: Zoe Markwalter
Purchase Repertory Theatre
A Lie of the Mind Saturday, December 3, 7:30pm Wednesday, December 7 7:30pm Friday, December 9, 7:30pm Saturday, December 10, 1:30pm The Performing Arts Center $20
Written by Sam Shepard Directed by John Gould Rubin A landmark play, funny and emotionally raw, about two families that are linked by marriage but divided by jealousies and mistrust. A gripping exploration of the violent, poetic, and mysterious forces in the American psyche from the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Buried Child. 39
Calendar of events
Seth Tobocman, 9/21
August until
10/2
Landed: Surveying New Geographies Neuberger Museum of Art Page 1 until
1/22
Destination: Latin America Neuberger Museum of Art Page 2
8/29–9/23
Mike Rossi: An Original Miscellany Richard & Dolly Maass Gallery Visual Arts Building Page 4 40
8/31 Wednesday
Visiting Artist Lecture: Mark Andre Robinson 4:30pm Visual Arts Building Room 1016 Page 12
September 9/7 Wednesday
New Media Lecture: Ekene Ijeoma 6:30pm Neuberger Museum of Art Study Page 15
9/11–12/23
Post No Bills: Public Walls as Studio and Source Neuberger Museum of Art Page 5
9/11–12/23
Ray Spillenger: Rediscovery of a Black Mountain Painter Neuberger Museum of Art Page 8
9/13 Tuesday
Paul Thibodeau: How Metaphor Shapes Thought 7pm Natural Science Building Room 1001 Page 18
9/13 Tuesday
Gallery Conversation: Mike Rossi and Glenn Adamson Richard & Dolly Maass Gallery 4:30pm Page 4
9/14 Wednesday
Visiting Artist Lecture: Peter Galbert 4:30pm Visual Arts Building Room 1016 Page 12
9/22 Thursday
10/5 Wednesday
9/28 Wednesday
10/6 Thursday
9/28 Wednesday
10/7–10/15
Claudia Rankine: A Reading and Conversation 4:30–6pm Humanities Theatre Page 16
Screening: Megunica 12:30–1:30pm Neuberger Museum of Art Study Page 6
Visiting Artist Lecture: Lumi Tan 4:30pm Visual Arts Building Room 1016 Page 12
October 10/1 Saturday Peter Galbert, 9/14
9/17 Saturday
National Theatre Live A View from the Bridge 8pm The Performing Arts Center Page 36
9/21 Wednesday
Bradley Brookshire: The Goldberg Variations Demystified 12:30–1:30pm Neuberger Museum of Art Page 23
9/21 Wednesday
Visiting Artist Lecture: Seth Tobocman 4:30pm Visual Arts Building Room 1016 Page 12
Fall Family Day 1–4pm Neuberger Museum of Art Page 9
10/1 Saturday
National Theatre Live One Man Two Guvnors 3pm The Performing Arts Center Page 36
Gallery Talk with Curator Patrice Giasson 12:30–1:30pm Neuberger Museum of Art Page 2
Joanna Gleason: Campfire to Cabaret 8pm The Performing Arts Center Page 24
Purchase Repertory Theatre: Middletown The Performing Arts Center Page 36
10/7 Friday
Purchase Symphony Orchestra: Children’s Concert 7pm Recital Hall, Music Building Page 24
10/8 Saturday
Jazz at the Center: Piano Spectacular 8pm The Performing Arts Center Page 25
10/10 Monday
Surface of Design Richard & Dolly Maass Gallery Page 10
Kirstin Valdez Quade and Justin Torres: Readings and Conversation 4:30–6pm Buffer Room, Admissions Building Page 16
10/4 Tuesday
10/12 Wednesday
10/3–11/11
Katherin Vockins: Rehabilitation Through the Arts: Creating Behavior Change in Prison and Beyond 7pm Natural Science Building Room 1001 Page 19
Visiting Artist Lecture: Alexi Worth 4:30pm Visual Arts Building Room 1016 Page 12
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10/14
Black Violin 8pm The Performing Arts Center Page 25
10/16 Sunday
National Theatre Live The Deep Blue Sea 3pm The Performing Arts Center Page 36
10/19 Wednesday
Visiting Artist Lecture: Kimberly Drew 4:30pm Visual Arts Building Room 1016 Page 12
10/19 Wednesday
Alumni Series: SoundMind Woodwind Quintet 8pm Recital Hall, Music Building Page 26
10/21 Friday
Warsaw Philharmonic 8pm The Performing Arts Center Page 26
10/22 Saturday
CMS of Lincoln Center: Emerson String Quartet with David Finckel 5pm The Performing Arts Center Page 27
10/26 Wednesday
Posters, Politics, and Power in Communist Cuba: Screening and Discussion of Wrinkles of the City 12:30–1:30pm Neuberger Museum of Art Page 7
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10/26 Wednesday
Visiting Artist Lecture: Nitasha Dhillon and Amin Husain 4:30pm Visual Arts Building, Room 1016 Page 12
10/27 Thursday
Alexander Chee and Garth Greenwell: Reading and Conversation 4:30–6pm Library, 2nd Floor Page 17
10/28–11/5
Purchase Repertory Theatre: Twelve Angry Jurors The Performing Arts Center Page 37
10/30 Sunday
Joshua Bell 3pm The Performing Arts Center Page 27
10/30–2/19
POP! Prints from the Permanent Collection Neuberger Museum of Art Page 11
11/4–11/12
Theatre & Performance Program Apparition Humanities Theatre Page 38
11/5Saturday
Doug Varone and Dancers 8pm The Performing Arts Center Page 20
11/9 Wednesday
Visiting Artist Lecture: Jack Whitten 4:30pm Visual Arts Building, Room 1016 Page 12
11/10 Thursday
Purchase Percussion Ensemble 8pm Recital Hall, Music Building Page 28
11/11 Friday
Faculty Chamber Concert 7pm Recital Hall, Music Building Page 28
November 11/1 Tuesday
Rene Almeling: Guynecology: Men, Medical Knowledge, and Reproduction 7pm Natural Science Building Room 1001 Page 18
11/2 Wednesday
New Media Lecture: Julie Martin 6:30pm Neuberger Museum of Art Study Page 15
Faculty Chamber Concert, 11/11
11/13 Saturday
National Theatre Live Frankenstein 3pm The Performing Arts Center Page 36
11/16 Wednesday
11/30 Wednesday
12/7 Wednesday
11/16 Wednesday
December
12/7 Wednesday
Visiting Artist Lecture: Curtis Mitchell 4:30pm Visual Arts Building, Room 1016 Page 12
Claudia Rankine and Alondra Nelson in Conversation 6pm Brooklyn Historical Society Page 17
11/16 Wednesday
Soul Voices: Goin Up Yonder! 7pm Recital Hall, Music Building Page 29
11/17 Thursday
Purchase Contemporary Ensemble: Steve Reich at 80 8pm Recital Hall, Music Building Page 30
11/18 Friday
Purchase Symphony Orchestra 7pm Recital Hall, Music Building Page 30
11/19 Saturday
CMS of Lincoln Center: Reflections 5pm The Performing Arts Center Page 31
11/19 Saturday
L.A. Theatre Works: Judgment at Nuremberg 8pm The Performing Arts Center Page 38
Camerata: The “Other” Four Seasons 12:30–1:30pm Neuberger Museum of Art Page 31
12/1 Thursday
Purchase Jazz Orchestra 7pm Choral Hall, Music Building Page 32
12/1 Thursday
Purchase New Music 8pm Recital Hall, Music Building Page 35
12/1–12/12
MFA Group Exhibition Richard & Dolly Maass Gallery Page 12
New Media Lecture: Leah Buechley 6:30pm Neuberger Museum of Art Study Page 15
Purchase Latin Jazz Orchestra 8pm Choral Hall, Music Building Page 33
12/8–12/10
Purchase Opera: Amahl and the Night Visitors The Performing Arts Center Page 34
12/9–12/11
Purchase Dance Company The Performing Arts Center Page 21
12/11
Purchase Repertory Theatre: Seven Guitars The Performing Arts Center Page 39
Purchase Symphony Orchestra & Chorus: Mozart Mass in C minor 5pm The Performing Arts Center Page 35
12/3–12/10
12/14
12/2–12/10
Purchase Repertory Theatre: A Lie of the Mind The Performing Arts Center Page 39
12/4 Sunday
Orpheus Chamber Orchestra with Fazil Say 3pm The Performing Arts Center Page 33
12/7 Wednesday
Gallery Talk: Marianelly Neumann 12:30–1:30pm Neuberger Museum of Art Page 2
Wednesday
Visiting Artist Lecture: Ann Agee 4:30pm Visual Arts Building, Room 1016 Page 12
12/15 Thursday
The Hip Hop Nutcracker 8pm The Performing Arts Center Page 22
12/16–12/17
The Rob Mathes Holiday Concert 8pm The Performing Arts Center Page 35 43
Tickets The Performing Arts Center
914 251 6200 Box Office Hours: 12–6pm, Wednesday–Friday www.artscenter.org Discounted tickets are available for seniors, students, groups and members of the campus community. Fixed Series and Create-Your-Own subscription packages are available, please contact the box office for details. Handling fee applied to all ticket orders. Select events are free and open to the public. Please refer to the event descriptions for further information.
Neuberger Museum of Art
914 251 6100 Hours: Tuesday–Sunday: 12 to 5pm Wednesday: 12–8pm* Monday: Closed *Labor Day to Christmas and MLK Day to Memorial Day Adults $5, Seniors $3 Free for members, the campus community, alumni, children under 12, and for the public the first Saturday of every month.
Neuberger Museum of Art Events
Event Admission $10 Free for the campus community, as well as Neuberger Museum of Art Members. Select events in the Neuberger Museum of Art Study are free and open to the public. Please refer to the event descriptions for further information. To register for events, please visit neuberger.org/events.php
The events at the following venues are free and open to the public: Administration Building Durst Family Humanities Building Library Music Building Natural Sciences Building Social Sciences Building Visual Arts Building Richard & Dolly Maass Gallery
Parking Information
Visitor Parking is available in lot West-1.
General Inquires 914 251 4455
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With Gratitude
The student performances and exhibitions in this calendar are made possible in part through the generous support of: An Anonymous Foundation The Benerofe Endowed Fund for Dance The Emily and Eugene Grant Fund for Music Performance and Presentation The Emily Grant Opera Performance and Production Fund Friends of Dance Friends of Music The James A. MacDonald Foundation Fund for Student Production Key Bank Endowed Fund for the School of the Arts The L. Werlinich Dance Production Endowment The L. Werlinich Design/Technology Fund The L. Werlinich Opera Production Endowment The Morris & Dorothy Rubinoff Foundation Purchase College Foundation Renee & Henry Richmond Fund for the School of the Arts Richard and Dolly Maass Visual Arts Endowed Fund Robert and Sherry Wiener Fund for Theatre Production School of the Arts Gala Fund The Shirley and Royal Durst School of the Arts Endowed Fund The Westchester Community Foundation Windgate Charitable Foundation
Your gift to Purchase College helps maintain the excellence of our arts and cultural programming and allows for many of the events to be free and open to the public. www.purchase.edu/giving
Purchase Dance Company Photo: Christopher Duggan
735 Anderson Hill Road Purchase, NY 10577
Visitor’s Guide:
www.purchase.edu/AboutPurchase/VisitorsGuide
Remember to vote! November 8, 2016