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Weekender: Relief Prints, Taking a Knee, Piano, Opera

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Art depiction of film still of football players, some taking a knee
Kota Ezawa, National Anthem, 2018. Video with sound, projection (1:38 min.) Collection of Pamela and Richard Kramlich. 漏 Kota Ezawa. Ezawa lecture is Thursday afternoon. See story below. (Photo courtesy of the Kramlich Collection.

Relief prints exhibit opens Friday at TANA 

The exhibition will run Friday, Feb. 18-March 18, with an opening reception on Feb. 18, 5:30-7:30 p.m.鈥 

Taller Arte del Nuevo Amanecer is proud to present Grabados del Alma: Gr谩fica Contempor谩nea Oaxaque帽a (Engravings of the Soul), an exhibition of relief prints by Oaxacan artists residing in both Northern California and Oaxaca, Mexico. Participating artists include Yankel Balderas Pacheco, Jhovany Rodriguez, Stephany Sanchez, Gabriela Morac, Aide Nuncamdi, Cristopher Dias, Edith Chavez, Ivan Bautista, Yescka, MK Kabrito, Irving Herrera and Cesar Chavez. 

Opening Reception: Friday

  • 6:30 p.m. Meet Artist Jhovany Rodriguez   

  • Live DJ music 

Location: Taller Arte del Nuevo Amanecer, 1224 Lemen Ave., Woodland

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'And Yet She Persisted: Women in Classical Music' is Thursday concert

Works for voice and piano

February 17, 12:05-1:00 p.m., Free, a Shinkoskey Noon Concert

Recital Hall, Ann E. Pitzer Center

Performers include soprano and piano

The program features Hai luli, Portraits of Disquiet, Three Songs, op. 21 and Songs from Letters. Calamity Jane to Her Daughter Janey, 1880鈥1902

Find a direct link to the livestream .

Annual Valente Lecture: Daniel Felsenfeld, composer

Feb. 17 4:30-6 p.m., via Zoom

Man in shirt sleeves with art backdrop
(courtesy photo)

is a composer and author whose work has been commissioned by a number of leading opera companies, orchestras, and other arts organizations. Composer John Corigliano says of his work, 鈥淐ommitted as strongly to freshness as to intelligibility, Dan composes music that鈥檚 strong, unusual, intelligent, and considerably skilled.鈥 The Valente lecture is an annual lecture at the Department of Music, 嘿嘿视频. 

Join the Zoom event .

Artist Talk: Kota Ezawa on current events and images

Thursday, Feb. 17, 4:30 p.m., Manetti Shrem Museum

Kota Ezawa鈥檚 work explores the appropriation and mediation of current events and images, referencing sources from the news, art history and popular culture. His work National Anthem (2018) uses television footage, presenting the actions of various players, coaches and Colin Kaepernick, and allowing the spectator to experience this act of personal and communal protest without comment or context. Ezawa said, 鈥淎s a sports fan, I understood the civic courage that the players displayed in that moment, risking their careers for the benefit of a social cause. It highlighted the connection between patriotism and protest 鈥 or that protest can be a form of patriotism.鈥

The work was included in the 2019 Whitney Biennial and is on view in 鈥淔rom Moment to Movement: Picturing Protest in the Kramlich Collection.鈥

The talk is organized by the museum, co-sponsored by the Department of Art and Art History鈥檚 Art Studio Visiting Artist Lecture Series. More information .

Photo at top of Arts Blog.

Opera: Hate, hope and incarceration addressed in Beethoven鈥檚 Fidelio

Prison choirs play a role; alum is costume designer

Singer dressed in prison blues
Courtesy photo

Saturday, Feb. 19, 7:30 p.m., Mondavi Center for the Performing Arts

In this adaptation of Beethoven鈥檚 Fidelio, a Black activist is wrongfully incarcerated. His wife, Leah, disguises herself to infiltrate the system and free him. But when injustice reigns, one woman鈥檚 grit may not be enough to save her love.  

贵颈诲别濒颈辞鈥檚 live cast of five singers and seven musicians are joined by a prerecorded virtual chorus of more than 100 incarcerated singers from six prison choirs in the United States. This daring work pits corruption against courage, hate against hope. 

they opted to mix both American dialogue and German arias, and more, in this interview with Director Ethan Heard. And catch a with Heartbeat Opera at 9 p.m.

Heartbeat Opera video .

More information and tickets .

Alumna designed costumes for opera

Alumna (M.F.A., dramatic arts, 鈥11) is the costume designer for Fidelio.

Kara Branch is a New York City based costume designer and stylist for theater, film, television, commercials and print. She earned bachelors of science degree in fashion design from Western Michigan University. 

Recent design credits include Imagining Madoff at 59E59th Theater,  Emma: The Musical for Streaming Musicals, Annie Get Your Gun at Westchester Broadway Theater, Into the Woods at Broadway Workshop and Killroy was Here for Digital Caviar. Recent assistant design credits include By The Way, Meet Vera Stark* at Signature Theater Company,  Slave Play at New York Theater Workshop and Detroit 鈥67 at McCarter Theater. 

Next week

Book talk features Samba

Tuesday, Feb. 22, noon-2 p.m.

Multipurpose Room, Student Community Center

This is no ordinary book talk. Assistant Professor Juan Diego D铆az鈥檚 talk next week on Afro-Brazilian music (subject of his new book) will be accompanied by the Brian Rice-led 嘿嘿视频 Samba School and the author鈥檚 Capoeira Ensemble. Feb. 22, free, in person and remote, presented by the Center for Advancing Multicultural Perspectives in the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities, or CAMPSSAH.

There are three ways to attend:

  1. Livestream available via (Registration Required).
  2. Livestream available via .

When many people think of African music, the first ideas that come to mind are often of rhythm, drums, and dancing. These perceptions are rooted in emblematic African and African-derived genres such as West African drumming, funk, salsa, or samba and, more importantly, essentialized notions about Africa which have been fueled over centuries of contact between the 鈥淲est,鈥 Africa, and the African diaspora. These notions, of course, tend to reduce and often portray Africa and the diaspora as primitive, exotic, and monolithic.

In Africanness in Action, author Juan Diego D铆az explores this dynamic through the perspectives of Black musicians in Bahia, Brazil, a site imagined by many as a diasporic epicenter of African survivals and purity. Black musicians from Bahia, D铆az argues, assert Afro-Brazilian identities, promote social change, and critique racial inequality by creatively engaging essentialized tropes about African music and culture. Instead of reproducing these notions, musicians demonstrate agency by strategically emphasizing or downplaying them.

Coming up

Templeton Colloquium in Art History

Feb. 25, 4-6 p.m.

Community Education Room, Manetti Shrem Museum of Art

This event will also be and recorded. 

Visitors must adhere to the Manetti Shrem Museum of Art鈥檚 .

Twentieth-century nationalism was marked by the effective use of press culture and graphic satire to shape the discourse of modernity. Along the way, women鈥檚 rights and minority rights were struggles that formal institutions resisted and appropriated. This year鈥檚 Templeton Colloquium, 鈥淥f Satire and Bigotry: Press Culture, Women鈥檚 Rights, and Liminal Modernity in West Asia鈥 invites four experts to address the often-overlooked role of liminal bodies in the processes of modernization and the forms of modernity in press and satire cultures based in such metropolitan centers as Tehran, Cairo, Istanbul, and Beirut. 

About the speakers 

Yasemin Gencer is a historian of Islamic art focusing on late Ottoman and early Republican visual culture and print media with a special interest in text and image studies and professor at Wayne State Univeristy. Gencer鈥檚 talk is entitled 鈥淢odernity, Image, and Liminal Identities in the Early Turkish Republican Press.鈥

Houri Berberian is a professor of art history, the Meghrouni Family Presidential Chair in Armenian Studies, and the director of the Center for Armenian Studies at UC Irvine. Berberian will discuss 鈥淏ogeymen and Birch Brooms: Pictorial Modernity, Satirical Newspapers, and the Armenian Women of Iran, 1920鈥58.鈥

Camron Michael Amin is a professor of history at the University of Michigan, Dearborn. Amin will address 鈥淪atire and Bigotry in Iranian Press Culture.鈥

Nadia von Maltzahn is a research associate at the in Lebanon and directs the project. Maltzahn will present 鈥淎 Thoughtful Exaggeration: Lebanon鈥檚 Early Independent Period through the Eyes of Diran.鈥

This event is organized and moderated by Talinn Grigor, professor of art history, 嘿嘿视频. This event is co-sponsored by the Manetti Shrem Museum.

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