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local artists

Reader's Theater to Perform A Steady Rain

Daveen Koh  —  Nov 11, 2011

Daveen Koh '14 writes about an early reading of A Steady Rain, which will make its Ithaca premiere next month.

Playing It By Ear

Sam Martinez  —  Sep 27, 2011

 

A neighborhood music festival.

Playing It By Ear

Sam Martinez  —  Sep 27, 2011

 

A neighborhood music festival.

Conscious of Time and Place

Emily Greenberg  —  Jul 8, 2011

Emily Greenberg gives Ithacans a guide to exhibitions on display this summer at the Johnson Museum of Art. 

Get it Right

Emily Greenberg  —  Apr 26, 2010

Last week, artist Les Krims visited Cornell to speak about his work  (currently featured in The Johnson exhibit Bodies Unbound: The Classical and Grotesque) and its controversial politics.

Layers Upon Layers: Paper and Image

Sarah Carpenter  —  Apr 21, 2009

This week’s art show in Hartell Gallery is no easy view — there’s a lot to see and dissect, from works on paper to sculpture and even sculptural works on paper. The viewer simply can’t absorb the entire installation in one turn around the room. Elliot Hess grad’s M.F.A. thesis show is challenging but not inaccessible; the conscientious viewer will not walk away empty-handed.

How We Roll: Printing at the Johnson

Kimberly Chew  —  Apr 21, 2009

Minna Resnick is a local artist who has been printmaking and drawing for over 30 years. She was the recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship in 1980, one of many other honors she has received throughout her career. Her work is currently displayed at more than 50 public and private collections, both nationally and abroad. She has taught and lectured at many colleges across the nation, and was even an art instructor at Cornell for a few semesters.

Fine Art Around Town

Mar 10, 2009

Eyes of the Flaneuse: Women Photographers of New York City

Johnson Museum of Art

Thursday Mar. 12, 5:15 p.m.

In conclusion of the Johnson’s exhibit “Well-Behaved Women Seldom Make History,” Prof. Mary Woods, a professor from the College of Architecture, Art and Planning will be speaking about a series of female photographers from the early 20th century. Woods’ brings a critical eye towards the stereotypical understanding of architecture and urbanism through her interest in photography, film and other representations of American culture. Give this timely union of art and feminism a spin; it's Women's History Month, after all. — A.L.

Haudenosaunee Project

Ithaca Ink Shop

Mar. 6 - Mar. 27

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