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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20250211T122734
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20250523T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20250523T160000
SUMMARY:Exhibition:Redefining the Crown
DESCRIPTION:In Winter 2025\, the Lane Hall exhibit space will feature a portraiture series titled Redefining the Crown showcasing the powerful stories of six Black breast cancer survivors.\n\nBased on a photo essay by U-M Faculty Versha Pleasant (MD/MPH) and Ava Purkiss (PhD) in Medicine at Michigan\, this exhibition examines the cultural and personal significance of hair within Black communities\, particularly through the lens of breast cancer treatment and recovery. The term \"crown\" is deeply symbolic in Black culture\, signifying beauty\, strength\, and identity. The featured photo essay by photographer Tafari Stevenson-Howard captures the intimate journeys of Ann Chatman\, Tanisha Kennedy\, Felecia McDaniel\, Shantell Elaine McCoy\, Tamara Lynn Myles\, and Veleria Banks.\n\nThrough their narratives and portraits\, the exhibit examines how these women have navigated the profound impact of hair loss caused by chemotherapy\, inviting the audience to witness their stories with radical empathy. It explores the cultural pride and personal identity intricately tied to their hair\, and how these elements are redefined amidst their battles with breast cancer.\n\nThe exhibit will be on view from January 21\, 2025 to August 8\, 2025. This exhibition is presented with support from IRWG\, the Department of Women's and Gender Studies\, and Michigan Medicine. \n\nLocated on the first floor of Lane Hall (204 S. State Street)\, the Exhibit Space is free and open to the public\, M-F\, 9am-4pm.
UID:129602-21864140@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/129602
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:african american,Art,institute for research on women and gender,women,Women's And Gender Studies
LOCATION:Lane Hall
CONTACT:
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20250519T101939
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20250523T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20250523T123000
SUMMARY:Presentation:3rd Year Student Seminar - Organic Cluster
DESCRIPTION:On Friday\, May 23rd from 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in CHEM 1210 please join us in watching the following third years present.\n\n*Time:* 10:05 to 10:30 a.m.\n*Student Presenter:* Colin Tichvon\n*Research Advisor:* Prof. Nagorny\n\n*Time:* 10:30 to 10:55 a.m.\n*Student Presenter:* Erica Ko\n*Research Advisor:* Prof. Narayan\n\n*Time:* 10:55 to 11:20 a.m.\n*Student Presenter:* Zoey Surma\n*Research Advisor:* Prof. Nagorny\n\n*Time:* 11:20 to 11:45 a.m.\n*Student Presenter:* Abdias Noel\n*Research Advisor:* Prof. Sanford\n\n*Time:* 11:45 a.m. to 12:10 p.m.\n*Student Presenter:* Sean Calvert\n*Research Advisor:* Prof. Montgomery
UID:135702-21877113@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/135702
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:Chemistry
LOCATION:Chemistry Dow Lab - 1210
CONTACT:
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20240130T121550
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20250523T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20250523T200000
SUMMARY:Exhibition:A Gathering
DESCRIPTION:Welcome. Make Yourself At Home.\n \nA Gathering brings together the newest works of art to enter UMMA’s collection — many on display here for the first time. \n \nAs a free\, public museum\, UMMA staff takes care of art for the benefit of the community and society at large. The works on view in this exhibition\, all brought into the Museum between 2019 and the present\, shows how institutions like UMMA are becoming more permeable to societal challenges\, and more nimble in responding to them in service to all in their communities. In this exhibition you will find works that reflect on how global migrations\, race\, gender\, and ecological change shape the way we engage with the world and inform our visions for the future.\n \nThis collection of artistic engagements with issues give us tools to envision who we want to be as individuals\, as a museum\, and as a society\, connected to one another across space and experience.\n \nSo gather here to take in these latest works of art brought here for you. Gather here to be engulfed in their forms and meanings\, to discuss their takes\, to learn\, to disagree. Gather to relax\, make a friend\, drink a coffee\, finish the daily Wordle. Gather to feel full\, to be moved and inspired by all the possible imaginations of what is yet to come.\n \nCurated by Félix Zamora Gómez Irving Stenn\, Jr. Fellow in Public Humanities & Museum Pedagogy\n\nLead support for this exhibition is provided by Lizzie and Jonathan Tisch\, the Richard and Rosann Noel Endowment\, and the University of Michigan Office of the Provost.\n 
UID:107870-21818124@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/107870
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:Art,Exhibition,Free,Humanities,Museum,Staff,UMMA
LOCATION:Museum of Art - Lizzie and Jonathan Tisch Apse
CONTACT:
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20250304T131847
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20250523T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20250523T163000
SUMMARY:Other:Moth Eden
DESCRIPTION:Explore \"Moth Eden\,\" an evocative art exhibit by Anne Erlewine\, running from April 19 to July 6\, 2025. ‘Moth Eden’ is a series of works exploring the relationship between the sacred reverence of the female form depicted as landscape and the conditioned tension of objectification contrasted by omission through eclipsing desire with the natural essence of bloom and nectar as it pertains to moth sustenance.\n\nAnne Erlewine\, an artist from Ann Arbor\, Michigan\, cultivated her artistic talents from an early age\, inspired by her fine artist grandmother. Her creative journey was further developed at the University of Michigan\, where she studied art and writing.
UID:133414-21873010@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/133414
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:Art,Exhibition,Free,In Person,Visual Arts
LOCATION:Matthaei Botanical Gardens
CONTACT:
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20240130T121551
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20250523T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20250523T200000
SUMMARY:Exhibition:Unsettling Histories: Legacies of Slavery and Colonialism
DESCRIPTION:Organized as a response to the Museum’s recent acquisition of Titus Kaphar’s Flay (James Madison)\, this upcoming reinstallation of one of our most prominent gallery spaces forces us to grapple with our collection of European and American art\, 1650-1850.\n \nIn recent times\, growing public awareness of the continued reverberations of the legacy of slavery and colonization has challenged museums to examine the uncomfortable histories contained in our collections\, and challenged the public to probe the choices we make about those stories. Choices about which artists you see in our galleries\, choices about what relevant facts we share about the works\, and choices about what - out of an infinite number of options - we don’t say about them.\n \nPieces in this exhibition were made at a time when the world came to be shaped by the ideologies of colonial expansion and Western domination. And yet\, that history and the stories of those marginalized do not readily appear in the still lives and portraits on display here. By grappling with what is visible and what remains hidden\, we are forced to examine whose stories and histories are prioritized and why.  \n \nIn this online exhibition\, you can explore our efforts to deeply question the Museum’s collection and our own past complicity in favoring colonial voices. In the Museum gallery\, which will open in early 2021\, you’ll be able to experience the changes we’re making to the physical space to highlight a more honest version of European and American history. \n \nBy challenging our own practice\, and continuing to add to what we know and what we write about the works we display\, UMMA tells a more complex and more complete story of this nation - one that unsettles\, and fails to settle for\, simple narratives. \n \n“Invisible things are not necessarily ‘not there’.... Certain absences are so stressed\, so ornate\, so planned\, they call attention to themselves\; arrest us with intentionality and purpose\, like neighborhoods that are defined by the population held away from them.” \n \n— Toni Morrison\n\nLead support for Unsettling Histories: Legacies of Slavery and Colonialism is provided by the University of Michigan Office of the Provost\, the U-M Arts Initiative\, and the Susan and Richard Gutow Endowed Fund.\n 
UID:84303-21621603@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/84303
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:Art,European,Exhibition,History,Museum,UMMA
LOCATION:Museum of Art - European and American Decorative Art
CONTACT:
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20250512T151636
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20250523T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20250523T130000
SUMMARY:Workshop / Seminar:EEB Student Dissertation Defense - Comparing micro- and macroevolutionary diversification dynamics between Neotropical montane and lowland birds
DESCRIPTION:Abstract:\nThe tropical Andes mountains and adjacent Amazonian lowlands are home to more species than anywhere else in the world. Prior work suggests that avian species richness declines but speciation rates increase as elevation increases in this biodiversity hotspot. Tropical mountains are also characterized by steep elevational turnover in environmental conditions\, including the availability of oxygen. My thesis compares diversification and selection dynamics between lowland Amazonian and Andean montane species\, with a special emphasis on tanagers\, an iconic Neotropical radiation and the most speciose family of songbirds. I focus on how patterns and processes of the early stages of speciation vary across elevation in the Andes-Amazonia system\, and on the molecular evolutionary consequences of hypoxic stress at high altitudes.\nWhether large macroevolutionary biodiversity gradients emerge from underlying microevolutionary processes is an active area of research in evolutionary biology. For example\, elevational gradients in speciation rates could be caused by geographic variation in the tendency for populations to become isolated and diverged from one another. A major focus of my dissertation is evaluating whether Neotropical montane and lowland regions differentially promote incipient speciation\, linking microevolutionary processes to broader biodiversity patterns. First (Chapter 2)\, I aggregated previously published mitochondrial phylogeographic datasets from birds in the Andes-Amazonia system (~7\,000 sequences from 103 species)\, to test whether levels of intraspecific population structure vary across elevation and whether rates of population differentiation predict speciation rates. My results revealed that phylogeographic structuring is higher in montane birds and increases with elevation\, but rates of population differentiation did not predict speciation rates in the focal set of taxa.\nNext (Chapter 3)\, I more rigorously explored how Andean and Amazonian landscapes promote population isolation and differentiation using whole-genome comparative phylogeography in 8 species of Tangara tanagers (4 Andean and 4 Amazonian). My results show that Andean species consist of more differentiated\, less connected\, smaller\, and less genetically diverse populations than Amazonian species. This supports a scenario of greater incipient speciation in the mountains\, but these same characteristics also reduce persistence in a theoretical metapopulation framework. In conjunction with results from my previous chapter\, I suggest that there exists a tension between factors promoting divergence versus persistence\, which could contribute to observed elevational biodiversity gradients in Neotropical birds.\nFinally\, elevational gradients are also marked by increasing hypoxia at higher altitudes\, an important physiological stress owing to the essential role that oxygen plays in cellular energy production. In Chapter 4\, I use comparative genomic methods across 20 species of Neotropical tanagers to test whether signatures of selection in oxidative phosphorylation genes vary with elevation. I find evidence of stronger purifying selection on components of this metabolic pathway in species with higher elevational distributions\, expanding our understanding of how tropical montane species cope with reduced oxygen availability.
UID:135603-21876986@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/135603
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:biological science,Bsbsigns,department of ecology and evolutionary biology,developmental biology,Dissertation,Ecology & Biology,Ecology And Evolutionary Biology,eeb,Graduate School,Graduate Students
LOCATION:Biological Sciences Building - 1010
CONTACT:
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