Fall Arts Celebration 2014 set
Fall Arts Celebration 2014 will feature distinguished writers, poets, musicians, artists and scholars. With something for everyone’s tastes, this year’s events focus on making sense of the new and unfamiliar while being charmed by the gifts of timeless classics.
All events are free and open to the public.
GVSU Music Department Presents
“Pioneers of American
Musical Theatre: Music from the Lost Operettas of John Philip
Sousa”
September 15, 7:30 p.m.
Louis Armstrong Theatre,
Performing Arts Center
Grand Valley faculty members and students will present
selections from two operettas from the pen of “The March King” that
had been lost to modern audiences: The Charlatan and The Bride
Elect.
“Mark your calendars for this fascinating glimpse
into a forgotten era of American music,” said Danny Phipps, chair of
Music and Dance. “Full of spirited march melodies and an unmistakable
aura of optimism, this is music to be dusted off and treasured once again.”
Art Gallery Exhibition
“Shared Passion: A Gift of the
Stuart and Barbara Padnos Foundation Collection”
Opening
Reception, September 30, 5-7 p.m.
Art Gallery, Performing Arts
Center
Exhibited August 22-October 31
The Barbara and Stuart Padnos Foundation gave 35 works of art
to Grand Valley. The pieces, from the home of Stuart and Barbara, were
purchased by the couple over decades as they traveled and grew as
collectors.
“I’m just thrilled that we have received this
gift,” said Henry Matthews, director of Galleries and Collections. “As
collectors, these works of art reflect a shared passion in their life
journey. Stuart and Barbara purchased art throughout their marriage
beginning with simple, humble works of art, to the increasingly more
sophisticated. As a group, it’s a wonderful reflection of the second
half of the 20th century that spans their life together.
Distinguished Academic Lecturer
Scott Simon, “Professional
Journalism in a DIY Age”
October 6, 7 p.m.
Eberhard Center,
2nd floor
NPR’s Peabody award-winning Scott Simon has reported from
every continent, covering political campaigns, famines, hurricanes,
earthquakes, civil wars and scandals. He is the host of Weekend
Edition Saturday.
“Scott Simon is the ideal person to
help us think about journalism in an age in which time demands are
24/7, and nearly everyone has a cellphone, but not an editor,” said
Fred Antczak, dean of the College of Liberal Arts & Sciences.
“With experience in so many parts of the world, across so many
different kinds of events and topics, Simon is ideally situated to
raise the right questions about how we should be thoughtful consumers
of what calls itself ‘news.’ As Grand Valley has just revamped the
broadcast/journalism curriculum in a more contemporary context, Simon
will be asking timely and demanding questions about what we need from it.”
Poetry Night
“An Evening of Poetry and Conversation with
Mark Doty & Dorianne Laux”
October 16, 7 p.m.
Eberhard
Center, 2nd floor
Mark Doty is the only American poet to have won Great
Britain’s T.S. Eliot Prize; he was also the winner of the National
Book Award for Poetry in 2008. Doty is a professor and
writer-in-residence at Rutgers University.
Laux is the author
of five books of poetry. She’s the recipient of two Best American
Poetry Prizes, a Pushcart Prize, two fellowships from the National
Endowment for the Arts and a Guggenheim Fellowship. Laux teaches
poetry in the MFA program at North Carolina State University.
“Laux worked as a sanatorium cook, a gas station manager and a maid,
before finding her true calling as a writer,” said Patricia Clark,
Writing Department chair. “Her poems have been translated into several
languages, including Afrikaans and Brazilian Portuguese. Doty has
published three memoirs and eight books of poetry. He is currently
working on a memoir that centers on his poetic relationship with Walt
Whitman, entitled What Is the Grass.”
Dance
“Gallim Dance: Articulate Bodies, Visceral
Language”
October 27, 7:30 p.m.
Louis Armstrong Theatre,
Performing Arts Center
Using a new dance language called GaGa, Gallim Dance, a New
York-based contemporary dance company, incorporates past and present
movement invention practices, fueled by human emotion.
Gallim
Dance is one of the world’s most sought after contemporary dance
companies. It is breaking new ground in choreographic invention,
physical realities and human awareness. Artistic director Andrea
Miller is a former Julliard dance graduate who studied GaGa technique
with the Batsheva Dance Company under the direction of Ohad Naharin.
Upon her return from Israel, Miller embarked on a cutting-edge mastery
of movement invention inspired by the compositional improvisation
structure of GaGa technique. Gallim’s dancers are fluid, quirky and
phenomenal talents.
Holiday Celebration
“The Many Moods of Christmas:
Celebrating the Traditional Music of the Holidays”
December 8,
7:30 p.m.
Fountain Street Church, Grand Rapids
Falls Arts Celebration concludes with the University Arts
Chorale and the Jenison High School Chamber Singers joining Department
of Music and Dance faculty and guests for a special performance of
Robert Shaw’s “The Many Moods of Christmas.”
Fountain Street
Church was selected for its superb acoustics and central location for
Grand Valley’s holiday gift performance to the West Michigan
community. Traditional Christmas carols will be sung with music from
composers like Handel, Bizet and Bach.
For more information on Fall Arts Celebration, visit www.gvsu.edu/fallarts or call
(616) 331-2185.
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