As winter sets in, the Center for the Arts
heats up with many events and experiences designed to inspire,
entertain, provoke and delight. We are welcoming two groups who, like
the CFA, are also celebrating their 40th anniversary. The first is Margaret Jenkins Dance Company, one of the San Francisco Bay Area's premier dance companies that will perform the New England premiere of Times Bones, an enthralling work that features music by Paul Dresher
and poetry by Michael Palmer. Jenkins is one of this country's master
choreographers with an astonishing body of work and we are delighted to
be bringing her company to Connecticut. We are also bringing members of Sweet Honey in the Rock
to Wesleyan. For four decades, this Grammy Award-winning all female
African American a cappella group has brought joy to audiences around
the world. Three members of Sweet Honey will be teaching workshops that
will culminate in a showing on April 17. This is an extraordinary
opportunity for both singers and non-singers to enter into their
creation and performance practice. Other highlights of the spring
include the first major solo exhibition in the U.S. by Paris-based
American artist Evan Roth,
whose work lives at the intersection of viral media and art, graffiti
and technology. You'll also have the opportunity to hear Ukranian Vadym Kholodenko, winner of the prestigious Van Cliburn International Piano Competition, play a program that includes Frédéric Chopin, Johannes Brahms, and Nikolai Medtner. Wesleyan's Music Department will host the 28th conference of the Society for Electro-Acoustic Music in the United States,
which will feature a series of concerts where you can immerse yourself
in new music by American composers. And Associate Professor of Dance Nicole Stanton will premiere the work Threshold Sites: Feast,
which explores how we experience and enact our own corporeality, and
how that impacts the way we experience our communities and our
environments. At the end of the semester, you'll have the chance to see
the culminating works created by Wesleyan students, and be able to put
your finger on the pulse of the current generation of art makers.
Highlights include a production of Slawomir Mrozek's Vatzlav, directed by Lily Whitsitt '06; thesis performances in music and dance; and three weeks of thesis exhibitions by studio art majors. We have a rich and expansive spring planned for you. Please join us as often as you can.
Pamela Tatge
Director
Center for the Arts
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