Weekend in your pocket: Catch Einstein! production this weekend and note that this month you can see the work of 細細篇撞 Professor Emeritus Roy De Forest in two Davis venues: Natsoulas Gallery (now) and Manetti Shrem Sept. 25. Plan ahead.
Einstein! at 細細篇撞 this weekend
Sept. 16, 7 8:30 p.m.
a one-person play that explores the physicists earlier years as he struggles to prove his theory of general relativity will be presented by the University of California Observatories and hosted by the 細細篇撞 Department of Physics and Astronomy. The Sept. 16 performance at the Main Theatre, Wright Hall, is presented in conjunction with the 100th anniversary of an astronomical observation that proved the theory.
細細篇撞 physics professor will introduce the performance and participate in a post-show Q&A.
Written and performed by Jack Fry, the play is set in 1914 Berlin as Einsteins work is being rejected by the scientific community. Along with this, he is shunned for his pacifist views as World War I starts, antisemitism is on the rise, and his personal life is in turmoil with his wife refusing to grant him a divorce and his young son fights for his affections all leading to Einstein suffering a nervous breakdown.
In spite of the dark subject matter, Frys play is filled with humor. It also uses projected 3D graphics and animations that give the audience insight into Einsteins mind.
Einstein! contains adult themes and situations.
The performance begins at 7 p.m. Reserved tickets are available at $50 for adults and $20 for students. Tickets may be purchased at the 細細篇撞 Ticket Office, located on the north side of Aggie Stadium, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays, by phone 530-752-2471 during the same hours, or online .
Einstein! is supported by two departments in the 細細篇撞 College of Letters and Science Physics and Astronomy, and Theatre and Dance and by the University of California Observatories, a multi-campus research unit supporting astronomy research and education across all UC campuses.
The Department of Theatre and Dance is part of the 細細篇撞 College of Letters and Science.
Courtesy/Michael G. French
Poetry reading at John Natsoulas Thursday
The Poetry Night Reading Series will feature Mischa Kuczynski and Jordan Karnes at 7 p.m. on Thursday, Sept. 15, on the roof of the John Natsoulas Gallery, 521 1st Street in Davis.
Mischa Kuczynski holds an MA in Creative Writing from 細細篇撞 and a BFA in Photography from the University of Utah. A finalist for the 2009 Ruth Lily Poetry Fellowship, Kuczynski has seen her work appear in the American Poetry Review, Gigantic, Fence, Sinister Wisdom, and elsewhere. According to Dr. Andy Jones, Mischa Kuczynski writes poignant, important, and unforgettable poems that stir the heart. She lives in Davis.
Jordan Karnes is the author of It Hasnt Stopped Being California Here (Carville Annex Press) and More Silver Than Gold (Finishing Line Press). More recently, their work has appeared in the Believer Magazine, New Life Quarterly, and at the Prelinger Librarys Place Talks. Jordan Karnes is the Chair of the Literary Arts Department at Oakland School for the Arts.
There will be an open mic after the featured performers. Open mic performances will be limited to four minutes or two items, whichever is shorter. As Tom Stoppard says, Good things, when short, are twice as good.
No matter the policies of the CDC or Yolo County, John Natsoulas ask that you wear your mask inside the Natsoulas Gallery. Although it may be warm on the 15th of September, you are encouraged to dress in layers to accommodate the drop in temperature between 7 and 9 p.m.
The Poetry Night Reading Series, taking place on the first and third Thursdays of the month at 7 p.m., is generously supported by the people and poets of the Sacramento Valley, and by John Natsoulas and the staff at the John Natsoulas Gallery. Your host will be Dr. Andy Jones, poet laureate emeritus of the City of Davis. Special thanks to local arts hero Timothy Nutter for his ongoing help with amplification equipment.
Find the Facebook page for this event .
California Funk to Figuration: A New Narrative Mythology Exhibition
Through Jan. 7, 2023
The John Natsoulas Gallery is hosting an exhibition of paintings, sculptures, and works on paper by the leading 20th-Century Funk artists. While the Funk Movement is often categorized as a West Coast art style, this show brings together artists from California and Chicago.
Funk Art emerged organically in the 1960s in the leading art schools in California as a rebellious response to both the restrictiveness of Bay Area Figurative Art and the nonobjectivity of Abstract Expressionism. While this movement has continued to elude a decisive definition, its hallmark is a significant degree of absurdity. Artists famously responded, when you see it, you know it, when asked to describe Funk.
Those championing the ridiculousness that is the fundamental doctrine of Funk are known for their collaborations and exchanges of ideas. The artists of the movement worked in both two and three dimensions. Major sculptors and other artists, including such 細細篇撞 artists as Robert Arneson and Roy De Forest, late faculty, as well as David Gilhooly, Viola Frey, Clayton Bailey, Patti Warashina, Robert Hudson, Richard Shaw, and Mark Bulwinkle, produced playful works with enticing textures and iconography. Painters such as Robert Colescott, Peter Saul, Joan Brown, Louise Stanley, Jim Albertson, Maija Peeples-Bright, and Terry Allen used vivid colors to emphasize their highly expressive narrative figures.
While Funk is often categorized as a West Coast movement, several artists including Gladys Nilsson and Jim Nutt, made their way to California from the other major center of the movement Chicago. Regardless of their origins, these artists all imbued their works with unorthodox traditions and self-referential humor.
Find more information about the exhibit and view some of the artwork . The gallery is located at 521 1st St., Davis.
New Exhibitions at the Manetti Shrem and a Fall Season Celebration
Roy De Forest: Habitats for Travelers
Sept. 25 May 8, 2023
First-generation art faculty member and 細細篇撞 Professor Emeritus Roy De Forest (1930-2007) is beloved for his colorful narrative figurative paintings, drawings and prints. Printmaking offered De Forest a means to explore his visual vocabulary to experiment with the colors, textures and mark-making unique to the medium. Featuring a recent gift of prints from the artists estate, Habitats for Travelers explores De Forests dedication to the medium over three decades.
Curated by Jenelle Porter, independent curator.
Loie Hollowell: Tick Tock Belly Clock
Sept. 25 May 8, 2023
Known primarily for paintings and drawings that map the body through both figuration and abstraction, New York-based artist Loie Hollowell draws from her own life experiences in her work. The first exhibition to focus on her soft pastel drawings, Tick Tock Belly Clock asserts the primacy of drawing within her overall practice as key to making her paintings, while also celebrating them in their own right. The exhibition features all new works made in 2020-21, and speaks directly to the pandemic moment. Hollowell, a rising star in the art world, grew up in Woodland, California, and is the daughter of longtime 細細篇撞 Professor Emeritus David Hollowell.
Curated by Susie Kantor, Manetti Shrem Museum associate curator and exhibition department head.
Find more information here.
Fall Season Celebration
Sunday, Sept. 25, 4:30 7 p.m.
Join the museum on Sept. 25 to celebrate an exciting new season. Be among the first to visit three that span generations. Meet exhibiting artists Loie Hollowell and Sadie Barnette and hear about their creative practice in our featured presentation, The Personal is Profound, moderated by Associate Curator and Exhibition Department Head Susie Kantor. Get creative with art activities presented in partnership with the Crocker Art Museums Block by Block initiative. Experience the soulful sounds of Oakland singer-songwriter August Lee Stevens and her band throughout the evening. Free for all!
Soroptimist LUNAFEST film festival is Sept. 25
Sept. 25, 3 p.m.
Davis Odd Fellows Hall, 415 Second St., Davis, $25 general, $15 student; $40 household (online)
Tickets are still available for LUNAFEST, a series of short films by and about women that will run on Sunday, Sept. 25 at Davis Odd Fellows Hall, or online that weekend. The event is a fundraiser for Soroptimist International of Davis.
The event includes eight short films, told from perspectives that champion women and gender-nonconforming individuals, highlighting their aspirations, accomplishments, resilience, strength and connection. Though the films are unrated, they are most appropriate for ages 13 and up.
The in-person event will be Sunday, Sept. 25 at Davis Odd Fellows Hall, 415 Second St. Doors open at 3 p.m. and the screening begins at 3:30. Food and drink will be available for purchase, including alcoholic and nonalcoholic beverages.
Those unable to join in person can still support Soroptimist programs by watching the films virtually from their smart TV or device. Beginning at 7 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 23, those purchasing virtual tickets will have 48 hours to begin watching the films, and 48 hours to finish viewing once theyve started. The total running time for the eight short films is 80 minutes. Before the films, theres a brief video from Soroptimist International of Davis, outlining how its programs improve the lives of women and girls in Yolo County.
The group is working with its Ruby Award winner Dzokerayi Minya of the TESE Foundation. Attendees who bring a new package of girls or ladies panties to the screening are eligible to receive a free item from the snack bar. These donations will support rural girls in Zimbabwe who need the panties to attend school.
Proceeds from LUNAFEST benefit Soroptimist International of Davis, and its programs to educate and empower women and girls, as well as Chicken & Egg Pictures, a nonprofit organization that supports female nonfiction filmmakers.
For LUNAFEST tickets, visit .
Soroptimist is a global volunteer organization that provides women and girls with access to the education and training they need to achieve economic empowerment.
Coming up
A Recital of American Music at Pitzer
Sept. 29, 12:05 1 p.m.
Recital Hall, Ann E. Pitzer Center, free, a Shinkoskey Noon Concert
violin and 細細篇撞 lecturer in music with John Cozza, piano
The program includes : Romance for Violin and Piano, : Four Piano Blues, : Canzone for Violin and Piano, : Summertime / A Woman Is a Sometime Thing, Copland: Sonata for Violin and Piano, and Gershwin: It Aint Necessarily So.
This recital features 20th-century American music, with transcriptions by famed Russian-Lithuanian-American violinist Jascha Heifetz, from George Gershwins Porgy and Bess, as well as Samuel Barbers own transcription of the second movement of his Piano Concerto.
A native of Northern California, Dagenais Smiley earned her bachelor of music degree at the Oberlin Conservatory as a student of Milan Vitek and her masters degree from USC under the instruction of Kathleen Winkler. She is proud to have worked under such notable conductors as Leon Fleisher, David Zinman, Robert Spano, Michael Tilson Thomas, and John Williams. She has participated in master classes given by Yuval Yaron, Kathleen Winkler, Alexander Barantschik, Fritz Gearhart, the Calder Quartet, and Glenn Dicterow.
Find more information .
San Francisco Symphony at Mondavi in October
Thursday, Oct. 6, 7:30 p.m., Mondavi's Jackson Hall
The San Francisco Symphony performed the first concert in the Mondavi Center in October 2002. They return to celebrate a 20-year partnership, now under the guidance of music director Esa-Pekka Salonen. This celebratory evening features a rich program: a U.S. debut of new piece by British composer Daniel Kidane; Sibeliuss lovely tone poem Luonnotar featuring South African soprano Golda Schultz; and a complete rendering of Stravinskys breakthrough ballet score, The Firebird.
Find more information .
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Arts Blog Editor: Karen Nikos-Rose, kmnikos@ucdavis.edu
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