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When Languages Mix
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Wednesday October 28th, 7:30pm - 8:30pm
Radio broadcast at WBGO 88.3 FM
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When Languages Mix: Special Radio Broadcast
The When Languages Mix program will be aired and simulcast at 7:30pm(E) on WBGO(88.3FM) in Newark, N.J. If listeners cannot receive the broadcast signal, we suggest simulcast listening by going to WBGO web site at www.wbgo.org
,click on the "Listen Now!" tab in the upper right corner and follow the prompts.
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Resistance and Revolution
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Thursday, October 29th 6:00 - 7:30 pm
Arthur M. Sackler Museum
485 Broadway, Cambridge, MA 02138
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Resistance and Revolution:
The Toussaint L'Ouverture Prints of Jacob Lawrence
Patricia Hills, Boston University
Created between 1986 and 1997, these 15 silkscreen prints by Jacob Lawrence (1917-2000) tell the story of the man who was born a slave but rose to lead the liberation of Haiti.
This is a collaborative program of the Harvard Art Museum and the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research.
A reception and viewing of the prints will follow at the Rudenstine Gallery, Du Bois Institute, 104 Mt. Auburn Street. The related exhibition is open to the public September 15-December 15, 2009.
Free admission.
For more information, please contact Susannah Hutchison at 617-496-8576 or susannah_hutchison@harvard.edu.
The M. Victor Leventritt Lecture Fund was established through the generosity of the wife, children, and friends of the late M. Victor Leventritt, Harvard Class of 1935. The purpose of the fund is to present outstanding scholars of the history and theory of
art to the Harvard and Greater Boston communities.
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The Wire at Harvard
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Thursday, October 29th 7:30 - 8:30 pm
Science Center D
1 Oxford Street, Cambridge MA
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The Department of African and African American Studies, The Boston Foundation, and The Ella J. Baker House Presents
The Wire at Harvard: Lessons for Politics & Policy

Featuring Sonja Sohn, Jamie Hector, and Michael K. Williams
with Panelists:
William Julius Wilson
Lawrence D. Bobo
Brandon Terry
Moderator: Jacqueline Rivers
Special Screening of Series Two Episodes!
Wednesday, October 28th, 6:30 pm, Science Center - Lecture Hall D.
Ticket Prices: Event is Free. Harvard ID Only. One (1) ticket per person per ID. Ticket valid until 7:15PM. Tickets only available in person at the Harvard Box Office location at 1350 Mass Ave. - Holyoke Center Arcade
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Betsabeé Romero
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Thursday, October 29th 8:00 pm
Antiguo Colegio de San Ildefonso
Justo Sierra 16, Centro Histórico
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La Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México,
and el Consejo Nacional para la Cultura y las Artes y el Gobierno del Distrito Federal
invite you to the opening of the exhibition
Betsabeé Romero
lágrimas negras
Thursday, October 29th, 8:00 pm
Valet Parking Provided
For more information, please visit: www.sanildefonso.org.mx
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Orhan Pamuk Public Lecture:
"The Center"
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Tuesday, November 3rd 4:00 pm
Sanders Theatre, 45 Quincy Street, Cambridge
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Norton Lectures by Orhan Pamuk
Winner of the 2006 Nobel Prize for Literature
"The Naive and the Sentimental Novelist"
Tuesday, November 3
"The Center"
Open to the public
No tickets required
Seating is limited
Please direct inquiries to
humcentr@fas.harvard.edu
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Call for Papers
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The Department of African and African American Studies
and the W. E. B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research at Harvard University Present
An Interdisciplinary Symposium Celebrating the Life and Scholarship of Nathan I. Huggins (1927-1989)
Conference Date: Saturday, December 5, 2009 10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Harvard University, Cambridge MA
Nathan I. Huggins was a leading scholar of slavery, racism, and African American history and a pioneer of African American studies from the 1960s to the 1980s. Despite the sobriety of his area of study, he is remembered by his students, friends, and colleagues
for his provocative and playful approach to scholarship and social criticism. His work as the first African American professor of history at Harvard University was motivated by the principle that without understanding the African American experience, one
can not hope to understand American history. This conviction led him to publish several seminal works investigating the cultural impact of slavery, bringing to light the richness of the Jazz age, and helping to launch the term 'Harlem Renaissance.' Many of
his contributions, assertions his contemporaries viewed as radical, have since become pillars of African American studies as an academic discipline. Despite his disciplinary dedication, Huggins' interests were broad and included music, art, poetry, literature,
inter-racial relationships, and cultural studies. The unifying thread throughout his work as scholar and teacher was Huggins' love of whimsical, surprising, cutting-edge ideas.
This symposium will celebrate the breadth of work that Huggins valued by bringing together scholars and artists from a wide range of disciplines. Noted guests will include Farah Jasmine Griffin, Martha Jane Nadell, Jeffrey Ferguson, and Randall K. Burkett.
We will feature both traditional and non-traditional scholarly and performative presentations. Possible themes include but are not limited to: history, literature, film, music, dance, poetry, visual arts, media studies, sociology, anthropology, cultural studies,
psychology, diasporic studies, religion, public and health policy, women and gender studies. We invite any and all paper / presentation proposals that reflect Huggins' spirit of eclecticism. Submission from graduate students and practitioners are particularly
encouraged.
Please send a one-page abstract outlining a 20-minute presentation as well as brief biographical information to the symposium organizers, Amber Moulton-Wiseman and Chérie Rivers by November 15, 2009.
Please contact the symposium organizers with any questions.
Amber Moulton-Wiseman - amoulton@fas.harvard.edu
Chérie Rivers - crivers@fas.harvard.edu
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Call to Artists
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CALL TO ARTISTS - Request for Qualifications
$50,000 Public Art Commission
Deadline: November 30, 2009
Limited to Artists within Greater Boston area
The Cambridge Arts Council (CAC) in Cambridge, MA is seeking an artist/team to create art for the public realm along the Cambridge Street Corridor.
The project and process offers a public art opportunity for a creative individual, or team of individuals, who are new to creating public art; and who live, work, or study in the greater Boston area. The final
commissioned project may be in any of the arts and design media - visual, performing, mixed media, architectural, landscape, social, etc., and can be temporary, durational, or permanent events or objects.
The Cambridge Street Commission process/timeline will be as follows:
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Artists submit images of previous work and biographic information
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Art Jury selects up to 10 finalists
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finalists attend required workshop on
Public Art
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Up to 10 finalists paid $1,000 each to create a proposal and a visual presentation
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All proposals exhibited in the CAC Gallery for consideration and discussion by the public/Committee
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Site Committee selects one artist/team to be awarded with the $50,000 commission
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The selected artist/team then executes the project in public
The Cambridge Street Corridor site is defined by Inman Square on the west end to Lechmere Square on the east (see
map here). This is a stretch of urban street, a little over one mile in length, that reaches three different neighborhoods and is a vibrant mix of demographics, businesses, homes, and street activity.
Timeline:
November 30, 2009: All Electronic Submissions due
Late-December 2009: Notifications of finalists sent out
Mid-January 2010: Required workshop for all finalists
March 19, 2010: Final proposals due at CAC by 12:00 Noon
April 1- June 18, 2010: Exhibition of proposals
June 1, 2010: Announcement of final selection
How to Submit:
Submit images and/or video of past work and biographic information at
http://cac.slideroom.com.
Registration is free and easy - upload digital files of work samples and complete a form of information and you will be considered for the Cambridge Street Project as well as all future public art commissions
within the City of Cambridge.
For more information about Cambridge Arts Council programs please visit
www.cambridgeartscouncil.org.
Fortechnical support using Slideroom, please e-mailsupport@slideroom.com.
For other questions please contact CAC Public Art Administrator, Jeremy Gaucher at
jgaucher@cambridgema.gov; 617-349-4388.
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Cultural Agents Presents:
Paper Picker Press
at
Culture for Change
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Starting November 2nd,
Cultural Agents will be part of the training team of
Culture for Change (CfC), using the methods of the the
Paper Picker Press to train s Out-of-School-time (OST) practitioners such as youth workers, artists, and staff with specialized training in order to design residencies in different art disciplines.
The project was built upon the idea that for youth, the arts promote engagement, offering educational opportunities that in turn set the stage for social change and development of youth voice/self-expression and networking.
To learn more about Culture for Change, please visit:
http://cfc.barrexternal.org |
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