UM*Events

Online Events Calendar

Thursday November 5 2009

Viewing events of type: Arts Related/Exhibition. Show all types.
Exhibit - Economy in Crisis, 1974-75
Time:
N/A
Location:
Gerald Ford Library

Economic crises on an international scale are not new, and President Ford inherited a tough one in 1974. A new exhibit at the Ford Library in Ann Arbor shows how he attacked a troubling brew of inflation, recession, budget deficits and oil supply worries. This exhibit features rarely seen artifacts and archival materials from the Ford Library and Museum collections.

Sponsor:
The Gerald R. Ford Foundation
Exhibit - Eventful Lives
Time:
N/A
Location:
Gerald Ford Library

Permanent lobby exhibits present the stories of President Gerald Ford and First Lady Betty Ford through archival photos and documents.

Sponsor:
Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library
Permanent Exhibits at the Exhibit Museum of Natural History
Time:
N/A
Location:
Alexander G. Ruthven Museums Bld.

The Hall of Evolution houses Michigan's largest display of prehistoric life. More than 600 million years of life on Earth are traced through fossils, models and dioramas. The Michigan Wildlife Gallery has a large collection of native Great Lakes birds, mammals, reptiles, and amphibians, with taxidermy mounts, habitat scenes, and the largest mastodon trackway on display in the world. There are also displays about some of the environmental problems faced in this region today. The Anthropology Displays feature artifacts from human cultures around the world. The Geology Displays on the fourth floor offer a large selection of rocks, minerals and gems. These displays are updated periodically. For more information go to www.lsa.umich.edu/exhibitmuseum/exhibits/permexhibits or call 734-764-0480.

Sponsor:
Exhibit Museum of Natural History
History of Dentistry exhibits at the Sindecuse Museum of Dentistry
Time:
8:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Location:
Dental & W.K. Kellogg Institute

Exhibits at the Sindecuse Museum of Dentistry include Dental Operatories of the 1860s to 1930s, St. Apollonia-Patron Saint of Dentistry and more. Call 763-0767 or go to www.dent.umich.edu/museum for more information.

Web:
http://www.dent.umich.edu/museum
Sponsor:
School of Dentistry
Secrets of the Garden - Scanner Art by Phyllis Ponvert
Time:
8:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Location:
Cancer Center
Room:
Level 1

These images were taken without a camera. Ponvert places her subjects directly on a digital scanner and then alters them in Photoshop. The images in this exhibit were taken over the past three years from subjects in her garden in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Her work has been shown at the Kerrytown Concert House, and her garden was chosen to be on the Ann Arbor Women's Farm and Garden Walk in 2008.

Web:
http://www.med.umich.edu/goa/exhibits.htm
Sponsor:
Gifts of Art
SOMEONE TALKED! - World War II: The Homefront
Time:
8:00 AM
Location:
Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library
Room:
North Lobby

North Lobby, First Floor, Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library Exhibit: "SOMEONE TALKED! World War II Posters from the University of Michigan Library"

Web:
http://www.lib.umich.edu/events
Sponsor:
University Library
UNITED WE WIN: The University of Michigan During World War II - World War II: The Homefront
Time:
8:00 AM
Location:
Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library
Room:
Library Gallery

Library Gallery, First Floor, Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library "UNITED WE WIN: The University of Michigan During World War II," an exhibit of photographs, posters, and other materials from the collections of the University of Michigan Library and the Bentley Historical Library

Web:
http://www.lib.umich.edu/events
Sponsor:
University Library
Wearable Art - 
Handwoven Fibers and More by Carol Furtado
Time:
8:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Location:
Cancer Center
Room:
Main Lobby, Level B2

U-M School of Art & Design alumna Furtado started as a weaver over 30 years ago, working on a loom. She is now engaged in a variety of activities as she produces her line of wearable art. Handweaving, felting, dyeing and beading are common tools of her trade. Lately, she has been exploring Nuno felting, a Japanese technique which combines wool felt with silk fabric. One of her dyeing techniques is a resist process involving clamping and applying dye in multiple steps, creating a multiple-color, multiple-shape design.

Web:
http://www.med.umich.edu/goa/exhibits.htm
Sponsor:
Gifts of Art
Arts & Bodies ArtsLab
Time:
9:00 AM - 4:30 PM
Location:
Duderstadt Center (Media Union)
Room:
Video and Performance Studio

The ArtsLab is an intensive, experimental, experiential exploration of the interrelationships between human arts and human bodies worldwide. Faculty and students from Architecture; Art & Design; Engineering; English; Kinesiology; Music, Theatre & Dance; and Psychiatry have collaborated using disciplines as diverse as robotics, movement "fingerprint" analysis, and charcoal drawing to create a set of unforgettable experiences. Free and open to the public, the ArtsLab takes full advantage of the sophisticated multi-media capacity of the black-box Video Studio. Space is limited: register early.

Web:
http://www.artsonearth.org
Sponsor:
Arts on Earth
Ida: Darwinius masillae
Time:
9:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Location:
Exhibit Museum of Natural History - 1109 Geddes Avenue

"Ida," a new exhibit in the Exhibit Museum's Rotunda, displays a high-resolution cast of an extremely rare fossil discovered in 1983 near Messel, Germany, but only recently made available for study. The fossil has proven to be a “link” between the prosimian and simian ("anthropoid") primate lineages. It has "advanced" front teeth (incisors and canines) and second toes like those of monkeys, and is broadly representative of what human primate ancestors may have looked like during the Eocene epoch 47 million years ago. Ida (prounded "eeda") is named after after the daughter of Dr Jørn Hurum, the Norwegian vertebrate paleontologist who secured one section of the fossil from an anonymous owner, and led the research. Ida was about eight months old, or the equivalent of a six-year-old human. Publication of a paper on the discovery was accompanied by a book, The Link: Uncovering Our Earliest Ancestors by Colin Tudge, and a documentary shown on the History Channel (US), BBC One (UK),and various stations in Germany and Norway. U-M paleontologist Philip Gingerich and U-M anthropologist B. Holly Smith were two members of the "dream team" invited to study Ida. The exhibit will be on display through May 2010.

Web:
http://www.lsa.umich.edu/exhibitmuseum
Sponsor:
Arts At Michigan

Additional Sponsors:
University of Michigan Exhibit Museum of Natural History
Parisa Ghaderi - 
"Again the City I Love" & "Unkown Tourist Attractions of Tehran, Iran & Posters on AIDS"
Time:
9:00 AM
Location:
Pierpont Commons

Room:
Wall Gallery & Piano Lounge

To me, Design is a way to keep me alive and make me truly believe “I design, so I am!” Mostly taking on social issues, I envision my work as a powerful weapon in dealing with challenges of the current civilized world. My greatest inspirations are among everything I see, feel and experience.

Graphic design fills me with a sense of accomplishment and integrity. It has proven to be the most amenable driving force for translating the inner vision to outer reality. Through my posters I can express my thoughts, ideals, joys, and regrets to touch the mind and hearts of my fellow human beings. Having respected the true value of creativity, I always tend to focus on novel ideas in order to make memorable and ever-lasting works of art. I adore simplicity and minimalism and this is well perceived from the direction I take in my works.

I also enjoy photography -- framing everyday life, traditions and beliefs. I do not seek to capture exceptionally rare moments and events; to me, every moment is unique and worth being read and seen many, many times. I use my photography vision in my posters, and enjoy the combination of photos with other forms of art. Through my works, I'd like people to explore life as they never had before, and to be more sensitive to minor happenings in its every aspect. I am inspired by my beautiful country, Iran, and its rich culture. There still would be a lot more to explore and experience. Here, I just framed a pixel of it!

-Parisa Ghaderi

Sponsor:
University Unions Arts & Programs
Takeshi Takahara "The Four Corners" (Printmaking exhibit) - 
RC Art Gallery welcomes A&D Professor Emeritus
Time:
9:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Location:
East Quadrangle
Room:
RC Art Gallery

Artist's reception takes place from 5:00-7:00 on Friday October 23. Come to the Residential College Art Gallery in East Quad to experience the printmaking works by Takeshi Takahara.

Web:
http://www.rc.lsa.umich.edu
Sponsor:
Residential College
(Un)Natural History: The Museum Unveiled
Time:
10:00 AM
Location:
Museum of Art (Alumni Memorial Hall)

September 12 through December 6, 2009

Richard Barnes's series of photographs Animal Logic examines the role the museum plays in our understanding of ourselves through the acts of collecting, preservation, and display. Images from this large body of work include photographs of the collections from the Smithsonian Institution, the Museum of Comparative Anatomy in Paris, the Canadian Museum of Natural History, and the San Francisco Academy of Science. (Un)Natural History focuses primarily on the natural history museum and by extension collecting institutions in general, providing a kind of behind-the-scenes look at museum practice and display.

This exhibition will coincide with the UM LSA Theme Semester Meaningful Objects: Museums and the Academy. UMMA's presentation is projected to serve as part of a three-venue project highlighting different aspects of Barnes's work in partnership with the UM Institute for the Humanities—who have selected Richard Barnes as the Paula and Edwin Sidman Fellow in the Arts for 2009—and the Cranbrook Institute of Science in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan.

Web:
http://umma.umich.edu/view/
Sponsor:
University of Michigan Museum of Art (UMMA)
Stearns Collection of Music
Time:
10:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Location:
Moore Building (Music, Theatre, and Dance)

The Stearns Collection at the School of Music, Theatre & Dance is one of six major collections of musical instruments in North America. The 2,500-piece collection is internationally known and is a resource for musical and cultural education.

Web:
http://www.music.umich.edu/research/stearns_collection/index.htm
Sponsor:
School of Music
The Lens of Impressionism - 
Photography and Painting Along the Normandy Coast, 1850–1874
Time:
10:00 AM
Location:
Museum of Art (Alumni Memorial Hall)

October 10, 2009 through January 3, 2010

This exhibition advances a new argument for the origins of what was called “the new painting,” namely that a unique convergence of forces—social, artistic, technological, and commercial—along the Normandy coast of France dramatically transformed the course of photography and painting (as well as of the region itself). Within this framework, the invention of the camera and the development of early fine art photography in that particular setting will be seen as the specific catalysts that brought about a new approach to painting.

The project will showcase paintings, photographs, and drawings by some of the most treasured artists in the Western canon—Gustave Courbet, Edouard Manet, Edgar Degas, and Claude Monet among them—as well as pioneering photographers such as Gustave Le Gray and Henri Le Secq. Inspired by the scenic Normandy coast of France, these works—including representations of beach scenes, seascapes, fishing villages, resorts, and the region's pastoral beauty—will be brought together with archival materials related to early tourism and regional expressions of French nationalism from popular culture for an innovative examination of the impact of the then-new medium of photography on ideas of image making, the recording of passing time, the capacities of painting, and the rise of Impressionism itself.

Organized by UMMA, this exhibition is made possible in part by the Florence Gould Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, Masco Corporation, and the University of Michigan's Office of the Provost and Office of the Vice President for Research. Additional support has been provided by the family of Raymond F. Cunningham in his memory. Following its showing in Ann Arbor, the exhibition will travel to the Dallas Museum of Art.

Web:
http://umma.umich.edu/view/
Sponsor:
University of Michigan Museum of Art (UMMA)
India: A Light Within - photography exhibit
Time:
12:00 PM - 6:00 PM
Location:
Duderstadt Center (Media Union)
Room:
Duderstadt Gallery

The bodily experience — textures, sights, sounds, and smells — of life in Calcutta in 2007 are evoked through the photography of award-winning Carnegie-Mellon faculty member Charlee Brodsky, and the prose and poetry of writers Zilka Joseph and Neema Bilpin Avashi. These contemporary photos and meditations are juxtaposed with a series of photos, "The Dance of Hands," which captures the expressive range of hand "mudras" in the ancient art of Odissi dance. Renowned dance master Sreyashi Dey performs Odissi dance live in this space on Friday, October 30.

Web:
http://www.artsonearth.org
Sponsor:
Arts on Earth
POETRY SLAM
Time:
8:30 PM - 11:00 PM
Location:
Michigan Union
Room:
U-club

Doors open at 8:30pm and the show starts PROMPTLY at 9pm.

There is an OPEN MIC session from 9-9:30pm where poets showcase their skills without being judged.

The SLAM is a competition wherein 8 poets have 3 minutes to give the crowd their best work. The winner of the slam will be photographed, automatically entered into the GRAND SLAM, and will receive MONEY from the tip jar.

Finally, from 10pm until 10:30pm, we have a featured poet! Many of them have been featured on Def Poetry Jam!

Web:
http://www.umich.edu/~uuap
Cost:
$3
Sponsor:
University Unions Arts & Programs

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