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Through public events and exhibitions, connect with the 91±¬ÁÏ community every week!

Many of these opportunities are streamed through Zoom. All 91±¬ÁÏ faculty, staff, and students have access toÌý.Ìý


91±¬ÁÏ Symphony

February 4, 7:30 PM |

David Alexander Rahbee leads the University Symphony in a program of music by Klengel, Mahler, Pärt, and Schubert. With graduate student conductors Daren Weissfisch and Rylan Virnig.

$10 |


2022 History Lecture Series: Capitalism in Action: The Jaffa Orange: Commodity, Empire, Nation, Land

February 2, 6:00 PM |

Liora Halperin, Rebecca and Jack Benaroya Chair in Israel Studies, gives this lecture in the 2022 History Lecture Series. A journey through the many transformations of Palestine and Israel through the land’s most iconic commodity. The Jaffa orange propelled Palestine into the world economy in the 19th century, generated a new Palestinian middle class, and sustained some of the most important Jewish agricultural colonies, laying the foundation for ongoing Zionist settlement. Even after its economic heyday, it has remained a multifaceted symbol of nation, land, and nostalgia and is used for a variety of political and cultural ends, both in Israeli culture and within the large displaced Palestinian diaspora.

Free |


2022 Critical Issues Lecture Series: Catalina Ouyang

February 4, 12:00 PM |

The 2022 Critical Issues Lecture Series is organized by the School of Art + Art History + Design in collaboration with the Henry Art Gallery. The general public is invited to join degree-seeking individuals studying fine art in order to share ideas and raise questions about contemporary art. In addition to the public lectures, undergraduate and graduate students enrolled in ART 361/561 interface with the speakers in additional sessions.

This week’s speaker, Catalina Ouyang’s work engages object-making, interdisciplinary environments, and time-based projects to indicate counternarratives around representation and self-definition.

Free for 91±¬ÁÏ faculty, staff, & students |Ìý


Photograph 51

February 2 – 6 |

In 1951, chemist Rosalind Franklin works relentlessly in her King’s College London lab, closing in on a major discovery that could unlock the mysteries of the DNA molecule. Undermined by her colleague Maurice Wilkins, she struggles to compete with rival team Watson and Crick as pressure intensifies to produce results. Anna Zeigler’s “rich, complex, and moving” (The Chicago Tribune) play honors the monumental contribution of one scientist with two X chromosomes whom history nearly left behind. Second-year MFA director Amanda Rountree makes her 91±¬ÁÏ Drama mainstage debut.

 

Ticketed |


Guitar Studio Recital: ¡¶Ù²¹²Ô³ú²¹!

February 4, 7:30 PM |

Guitar students of Michael Partington presentÌý¡¶Ù²¹²Ô³ú²¹! featuring music from Russia, Europe and Latin America by Poulenc, Granados, Koshkin, Matos Rodriguez, and others.ÌýÌýFree |


Looking for more?

Check out 91±¬ÁÏAA’s Stronger Together web page forÌýmore digital engagement opportunities.