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Events for Thursday, March 26, 2026

8:00 AM-8:00 PM Arts and Minds: A Showcase for Creative Aging LeMoyne College

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Gary Quirk: The Nature I See Through Clay Baltimore Woods Weeks Art Gallery

9:30 AM-6:00 PM Whimsy and Joy Edgewood Gallery

10:00 AM-8:00 PM Healing Forward: Rituals of Self Repair, Cultivation of Community, and Collective Activation Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-8:00 PM Possible Worlds: 20 Years of the Wynn Newhouse Awards Syracuse University Art Museum

10:00 AM-8:00 PM Undressed: The Nude in Dutch Art, circa 1550-1800 Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-8:00 PM Laurent Craste: Iconoclasts Everson Museum of Art

11:00 AM-8:00 PM Lessons in Geometry Everson Museum of Art

11:00 AM-8:00 PM Joyce Kozloff: Contested Territories, 1983-2023 Everson Museum of Art

11:00 AM-8:00 PM Tal Placido: Meeting Place Everson Museum of Art

11:00 AM-8:00 PM Federico Solmi: Adrift Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Freedom and Control Brewer Harris Projects

7:00 PM Da Redhouse

7:00 PM *SOLD OUT* Grupo Pagan The 443 Social Club

7:30 PM Joe Turner's Come and Gone Syracuse Stage

7:45 PM-11:00 PM Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival Urban Video Project

Events for Friday, March 27, 2026

8:00 AM-5:00 PM Arts and Minds: A Showcase for Creative Aging LeMoyne College

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Gary Quirk: The Nature I See Through Clay Baltimore Woods Weeks Art Gallery

9:30 AM-6:00 PM Whimsy and Joy Edgewood Gallery

10:00 AM-8:00 PM Healing Forward: Rituals of Self Repair, Cultivation of Community, and Collective Activation Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Undressed: The Nude in Dutch Art, circa 1550-1800 Syracuse University Art Museum

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Possible Worlds: 20 Years of the Wynn Newhouse Awards Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-5:00 PM Laurent Craste: Iconoclasts Everson Museum of Art

11:00 AM-5:00 PM Joyce Kozloff: Contested Territories, 1983-2023 Everson Museum of Art

11:00 AM-5:00 PM Lessons in Geometry Everson Museum of Art

11:00 AM-5:00 PM Federico Solmi: Adrift Everson Museum of Art

11:00 AM-5:00 PM Tal Placido: Meeting Place Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-5:00 PM Beginnings: A New Century of Associated Artists of CNY Art in the Atrium

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Freedom and Control Brewer Harris Projects

6:00 PM-7:30 PM ArtRage Goes Off the Wall ArtRage Gallery

7:00 PM Da Redhouse

7:00 PM *SOLD OUT* Lil’ Ed & the Blues Imperials The 443 Social Club

7:30 PM The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee Covey Theatre Company

7:30 PM Joe Turner's Come and Gone Syracuse Stage

7:30 PM Steel Hearts: The John Henry Musical The Oncenter

7:45 PM-11:00 PM Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival Urban Video Project

8:00 PM Preview: A Rebel Prayer Syracuse University Drama Department

Events for Saturday, March 28, 2026

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Gary Quirk: The Nature I See Through Clay Baltimore Woods Weeks Art Gallery

10:00 AM-2:30 PM Healing Forward: Rituals of Self Repair, Cultivation of Community, and Collective Activation Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-2:00 PM Whimsy and Joy Edgewood Gallery

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Tal Placido: Meeting Place Everson Museum of Art

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Federico Solmi: Adrift Everson Museum of Art

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Lessons in Geometry Everson Museum of Art

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Joyce Kozloff: Contested Territories, 1983-2023 Everson Museum of Art

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Laurent Craste: Iconoclasts Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-8:00 PM Beginnings: A New Century of Associated Artists of CNY Art in the Atrium

12:00 PM-6:00 PM Freedom and Control Brewer Harris Projects

12:00 PM-4:00 PM Possible Worlds: 20 Years of the Wynn Newhouse Awards Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-4:00 PM Undressed: The Nude in Dutch Art, circa 1550-1800 Syracuse University Art Museum

2:00 PM Da Redhouse

2:00 PM Joe Turner's Come and Gone Syracuse Stage

2:30 PM Steel Hearts: The John Henry Musical The Oncenter

6:00 PM Composers’ Pop-Up Concert Society for New Music

7:00 PM Triple Dog Death Barrage Album Release Concert and Benefit ArtRage Gallery

7:00 PM Candlelight Series: Candlelight Pops Syracuse Orchestra (formerly Symphoria)

7:00 PM Adeem the Artist The 443 Social Club

7:30 PM The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee Covey Theatre Company

7:30 PM Donna Colton & Sam Patterelli Steeple Coffee House

7:30 PM Salix Piano Trio Syracuse Friends of Chamber Music

7:30 PM Joe Turner's Come and Gone Syracuse Stage

7:30 PM Steel Hearts: The John Henry Musical The Oncenter

7:45 PM-11:00 PM Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival Urban Video Project

8:00 PM Da Redhouse

8:00 PM Opening: A Rebel Prayer Syracuse University Drama Department

Events for Sunday, March 29, 2026

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Joyce Kozloff: Contested Territories, 1983-2023 Everson Museum of Art

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Lessons in Geometry Everson Museum of Art

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Laurent Craste: Iconoclasts Everson Museum of Art

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Tal Placido: Meeting Place Everson Museum of Art

10:00 AM-5:00 PM Federico Solmi: Adrift Everson Museum of Art

12:00 PM-8:00 PM Beginnings: A New Century of Associated Artists of CNY Art in the Atrium

12:00 PM-4:00 PM Undressed: The Nude in Dutch Art, circa 1550-1800 Syracuse University Art Museum

12:00 PM-4:00 PM Possible Worlds: 20 Years of the Wynn Newhouse Awards Syracuse University Art Museum

1:00 PM *SOLD OUT* Shakedown Sunday The 443 Social Club

2:00 PM Da Redhouse

2:00 PM Joe Turner's Come and Gone Syracuse Stage

2:00 PM A Rebel Prayer Syracuse University Drama Department

2:30 PM Steel Hearts: The John Henry Musical The Oncenter

7:00 PM Shakedown Sunday The 443 Social Club

8:00 PM A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie The Oncenter

Events for Monday, March 30, 2026

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Gary Quirk: The Nature I See Through Clay Baltimore Woods Weeks Art Gallery

10:00 AM-8:00 PM Healing Forward: Rituals of Self Repair, Cultivation of Community, and Collective Activation Community Folk Art Center

Events for Tuesday, March 31, 2026

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Gary Quirk: The Nature I See Through Clay Baltimore Woods Weeks Art Gallery

9:30 AM-6:00 PM Whimsy and Joy Edgewood Gallery

10:00 AM-8:00 PM Healing Forward: Rituals of Self Repair, Cultivation of Community, and Collective Activation Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Possible Worlds: 20 Years of the Wynn Newhouse Awards Syracuse University Art Museum

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Undressed: The Nude in Dutch Art, circa 1550-1800 Syracuse University Art Museum

Events for Wednesday, April 1, 2026

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Gary Quirk: The Nature I See Through Clay Baltimore Woods Weeks Art Gallery

9:30 AM-6:00 PM Whimsy and Joy Edgewood Gallery

10:00 AM-8:00 PM Healing Forward: Rituals of Self Repair, Cultivation of Community, and Collective Activation Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Undressed: The Nude in Dutch Art, circa 1550-1800 Syracuse University Art Museum

10:00 AM-4:00 PM Possible Worlds: 20 Years of the Wynn Newhouse Awards Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-5:00 PM Laurent Craste: Iconoclasts Everson Museum of Art

11:00 AM-5:00 PM Lessons in Geometry Everson Museum of Art

11:00 AM-5:00 PM Joyce Kozloff: Contested Territories, 1983-2023 Everson Museum of Art

11:00 AM-5:00 PM Federico Solmi: Adrift Everson Museum of Art

8:00 PM A Rebel Prayer Syracuse University Drama Department

Events for Thursday, April 2, 2026

9:00 AM-4:00 PM Gary Quirk: The Nature I See Through Clay Baltimore Woods Weeks Art Gallery

9:30 AM-6:00 PM Whimsy and Joy Edgewood Gallery

10:00 AM-8:00 PM Healing Forward: Rituals of Self Repair, Cultivation of Community, and Collective Activation Community Folk Art Center

10:00 AM-8:00 PM Possible Worlds: 20 Years of the Wynn Newhouse Awards Syracuse University Art Museum

10:00 AM-8:00 PM Undressed: The Nude in Dutch Art, circa 1550-1800 Syracuse University Art Museum

11:00 AM-8:00 PM Laurent Craste: Iconoclasts Everson Museum of Art

11:00 AM-8:00 PM Joyce Kozloff: Contested Territories, 1983-2023 Everson Museum of Art

11:00 AM-8:00 PM Lessons in Geometry Everson Museum of Art

11:00 AM-8:00 PM Federico Solmi: Adrift Everson Museum of Art

8:00 PM A Rebel Prayer Syracuse University Drama Department

8:00 PM-11:00 PM Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival Urban Video Project

Next week  >>>

Thursday, March 26, 2026


Art
 

8:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 26



Arts and Minds: A Showcase for Creative Aging
LeMoyne College

Price: Free
Wilson Art Gallery, Noreen Reale Falcone Library
LeMoyne College, Syracuse

This exhibit features 21 works by 12 elder artists in the Syracuse Jewish Family Service (SJFS) Arts and Minds Program. Through their participation in various creative projects, the artists expressed themselves and made choices that reflect their aesthetic preferences while also learning about and exploring new artistic techniques. Most importantly, the participants unlocked a feeling of achievement and success. SJFS is a nonprofit agency dedicated to helping individuals and families of any faith and age in Central New York.

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9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 26



Gary Quirk: The Nature I See Through Clay
Baltimore Woods Weeks Art Gallery

Price: Free
Baltimore Woods Nature Center
4007 Bishop Hill Rd., Marcellus

Gary Quirk creates images in slabs of clay as a way of remembering and celebrating the world around him. According to Quirk, the images emerge from chance sightings or from dreams of sightings yet hoped for. They are derived from encounters with the outdoors that range from grand vistas to familiar urban settings, some from his own neighborhood. It is his wish that his tiles will serve as a focal point for other people to observe the beauty we find in our world.

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9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, March 26



Whimsy and Joy
Edgewood Gallery

Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd., Syracuse

Kathleen Crinnin: acrylic paintings
Linda Malik: sculptural ceramics
Eva Hunter: mixed media jewelry, alcohol ink paintings, oils, pastels, and silk scarves

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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 26



Healing Forward: Rituals of Self Repair, Cultivation of Community, and Collective Activation
Community Folk Art Center

Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

A retrospective exhibition of over 60 multimedia and quilted works by Amber Robles-Gordon, an interdisciplinary visual artist of Puerto Rican and Caribbean descent who resides in Washington, DC. This body of work traces the through-line of healing — personal, communal, spiritual, and ecological frameworks — across the artistic career of Amber Robles-Gordon. Bringing together installations, quilts, assemblages, and collages created over more than a decade, the exhibition reveals how healing has functioned not only as a thematic concern, but as a methodology and ethical framework within the artist's practice.

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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 26



Possible Worlds: 20 Years of the Wynn Newhouse Awards
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

This landmark exhibition marks the 20th anniversary of the Wynn Newhouse Award, a pioneering initiative that has recognized and elevated artists of excellence who happen to live with disabilities. Established in 2006 by Wynn Newhouse, the award has championed bold, boundary-defying voices in contemporary art — highlighting practices that are as varied in form as they are unified in vision: a vision of art as a space where representation, identity, and access are not peripheral concerns, but central to the discourse.

At the heart of the exhibition is a curatorial inquiry: How do artists with disabilities navigate the art world, and the world at large, on their terms? And how does that navigation inform their work, influence its reception, and expand the field of cultural production? The goal is not to position disability as a central or singular theme, but to acknowledge it as one of many intersecting conditions that inform artistic practice. In doing so, this exhibition prompts us to reconsider who gets seen, whose experiences shape the canon, and how institutions can create more equitable conditions for artistic participation and recognition.

Exhibiting artists include Beverly Baker, Derrick Alexis Coard, Courttney Cooper, Joseph Grigley, Em Kettner, Reverend Joyce McDonald, William Scott, Kambel Smith, Katz Tepper, Melvin Way, and Peter Williams.

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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 26



Undressed: The Nude in Dutch Art, circa 1550-1800
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition, encompassing 21 works in various media, surveys the portrayal of nudity and semi-nudity in a variety of subjects rendered by Dutch artists over several centuries. It will explore how the nude has been articulated, both artistically and contextually, to disrupt traditional ideas of nudity in art, which were primarily argued by Sir Kenneth Clark in The Nude: A Study in Ideal Form (1956).

In this influential text, Clark posited that the presence of the nude in art, existed above and beyond cultural circumstances, as a timeless, almost abstract ideal. He advanced a distinction between "naked" and "nude," with the latter explained as an idealization, or an evocation of timeless ideals. To the contrary, this exhibition presents nudity in art as a phenomenon that is time-bound and culturally determined.

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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 26



Laurent Craste: Iconoclasts
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

"Iconoclasts" marks the American museum debut for French-born Canadian ceramist Laurent Craste. Over the past decade, Craste has committed a wide range of indignities and abuse against his ornate vases and urns, including pummeling them with baseball bats and crowbars and piercing them with arrows. Despite the violence that runs through his work, Craste has a great passion for historical porcelain. Working with porcelain allows Craste to explore the prestige and power of upper-class society, but also inequality and the strain that is placed on working people. The anthropomorphic nature of Craste's vases echoes the human body, making it no surprise that people feel strong emotions when seeing a helpless vase struck by a baseball bat. Triggering these strong emotions in his audience allows Craste to connect on a deeper level as he asks questions about class, money, and power.

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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 26



Lessons in Geometry
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Artists have obsessed over the relationship between mathematics and art for millennia. As artists turned toward abstraction in the early 20th century, Europeans like Piet Mondrian used geometry to create a set of rules and parameters that guided their creative process. Meanwhile, American artists began developing their own styles and movements—particularly Abstract Expressionism, which was typified by bold, quickly executed brushwork, drips, and splashes. In the mid-20th century in the United States, artists laid the groundwork for Geometric Abstraction as a more cerebral alternative to the often macho flamboyance of Abstract Expressionism. Over the ensuing decades, artists used geometry to produce abstract works that ranged from the dazzling Op Art of Victor Vasarely to the restrained Minimalism of Sol LeWitt.

"Lessons in Geometry" traces the evolution of hard-edged abstraction in the United States as artists sought to use pure geometric forms to create works with balance, harmony, and order. For these artists, shape, line, and color took precedence over representational compositions. The Everson's collection reflects the wildly varied ways that artists have used geometry to serve their personal expression, from the analytical formulations of Robert Swain to the shaped canvases of Harmony Hammond and the spatial illusions of Tony King.

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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 26



Joyce Kozloff: Contested Territories, 1983-2023
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

For more than four decades, Joyce Kozloff has explored how the entanglements of geography, history, and power influence the visual language of maps. "Contested Territories" presents a selection of Kozloff's works that uncover how maps shape our understanding of the world—not as neutral tools, but as instruments of influence, ideology, and control.

Kozloff's wide range of sources include historical maps, classroom wall maps, atlases, globes, and even satellite imagery from Google Maps. Her dense and colorful works often layer these materials with hand-painted details, collage, and intricate ornamentation. By combining sources that span centuries—from Renaissance celestial charts to contemporary digital mapping—she exposes how maps carry the legacies of empire, conflict, and shifting territorial claims.

A founding figure in the Pattern and Decoration movement, Kozloff combines meticulous craftsmanship with political critique. Her works are labor-intensive, involving the detailed process of painting, drawing, and collaging over cartographic surfaces. The resulting richly textured visual field invites viewers to look closely—and to question the conquest, division, and erasure found beneath the official surface narrative.

Whether reimagining educational globes or deconstructing colonial-era charts, Kozloff transforms maps from static documents into contested, dynamic spaces. Her work encourages viewers to reconsider how borders are drawn as well as how art can reclaim such boundaries as sites of resistance, memory, and possibility.

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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 26



Tal Placido: Meeting Place
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Tal Placido's large-scale abstract paintings begin with a conversation. Instead of working on blank primed canvas, Placido paints on vintage linens, embracing their stains, snags, and embellishments. A native of the Philippines, Placido is attuned to the family stories and lived experiences that she literally weaves into her work. The images she presents in Meeting Place are a record of the dialogue between experience-laden objects and an artist more concerned about thoughtful questions than concrete answers.

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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 26



Federico Solmi: Adrift
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Visually sumptuous and incisively satirical, Federico Solmi's multimedia works expose the excesses and contradictions of power across history and contemporary culture. Adrift presents new and recent "video paintings" alongside the monumental canvas The Ship of Fools, which reimagines Théodore Géricault's Raft of the Medusa (1818–19) through Solmi's irreverent visual language. The painting assembles historical and present-day figures, from Christopher Columbus to Elon Musk, into a chaotic allegory of a society unmoored. Evoking a contemporary America adrift amid spectacle, instability, and competing claims to power, the exhibition also includes a Virtual Reality experience that immerses visitors in Solmi's destabilizing world.

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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 26



Freedom and Control
Brewer Harris Projects

138 Bank Alley (University Building)
Syracuse

"Freedom and Control" explores the passport as a real and imagined object, a repository of dreams and nightmares. The document's fundamental purpose has always been tied to freedom of movement — passports make it possible for some individuals to cross international borders and allow the State to convey and govern the permission to do so. While the the document may seem to provide a kind of freedom to its bearer, it often does the opposite. Passports from some countries carry almost no restrictions on travel, while passports from others severely constrain citizens' ability to leave their home country.

Working in sculpture, photography, book arts and installation, the artists in this exhibition consider, critique and deconstruct this charged document to highlight its myriad uses; as a tool of State control, an indispensable object that fixes or erases national identity, or a portal through which we might imagine other ways of being in and moving through the world.

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7:45 PM - 11:00 PM, March 26



Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
Urban Video Project

Price: Free
Everson Museum of Art Plaza
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

The Temple of Our Survival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exploring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews conducted by the artist with local care workers, land stewards, and cultural workers in her nomadic film set and project space.

Screening begins at dusk.

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Music
 

7:00 PM, March 26



*SOLD OUT* Grupo Pagan
The 443 Social Club

The 443 Social Club
443 Burnet Ave., Syracuse

Grupo Pagan is excited to return to The 443 for a fun evening of world rhythms and sounds with special guest and renowned percussionist Emedin Rivera.

Join the waitlist

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Theater
 

7:00 PM, March 26



Da
Redhouse
Vincent Cardinal, director

Redhouse at City Center
400 S. Salina St., Syracuse

In this Tony award-winner for best play, by Hugh Leonard, middle-aged assimilated American Charlie returns home to his native Dublin to sort through and come to terms with his relationship to this thoroughly beguiling, maddening presence in his life: "Da." Reminiscence gives way to memory and illusion as an adolescent "Charlie Then" is brought back from the past, while the man who is "Charlie Now" grapples with his own mortality, and the part of his life that will always be the irascible "Da."

Tickets

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7:30 PM, March 26



Joe Turner's Come and Gone
Syracuse Stage
Timothy Douglas, director

Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

August Wilson's mystical and heartbreaking masterpiece.

1911. Pittsburgh. Seth Holly's boarding house is home to drifters and broken hearts, a waystation for folks biding their time. The residents include a restless musician with a wandering eye, a young woman waiting on a husband who's not coming back, and an eccentric mystic who performs rituals in the yard while helping others find their song. Enter Herald Loomis, recently freed from a Southern chain gang with his young daughter in tow and desperate to reunite with a wife who might not want to be found. A lyrical triumph from Wilson's magnificent Century Cycle, Joe Turner's Come and Gone is a haunting and poetic tale of lost souls searching for spiritual mooring in the raging sea that is America.

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Friday, March 27, 2026


Art
 

8:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 27



Arts and Minds: A Showcase for Creative Aging
LeMoyne College

Price: Free
Wilson Art Gallery, Noreen Reale Falcone Library
LeMoyne College, Syracuse

This exhibit features 21 works by 12 elder artists in the Syracuse Jewish Family Service (SJFS) Arts and Minds Program. Through their participation in various creative projects, the artists expressed themselves and made choices that reflect their aesthetic preferences while also learning about and exploring new artistic techniques. Most importantly, the participants unlocked a feeling of achievement and success. SJFS is a nonprofit agency dedicated to helping individuals and families of any faith and age in Central New York.

Save to Google calendar   Save to desktop calendar

Back to list
 

 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 27



Gary Quirk: The Nature I See Through Clay
Baltimore Woods Weeks Art Gallery

Price: Free
Baltimore Woods Nature Center
4007 Bishop Hill Rd., Marcellus

Gary Quirk creates images in slabs of clay as a way of remembering and celebrating the world around him. According to Quirk, the images emerge from chance sightings or from dreams of sightings yet hoped for. They are derived from encounters with the outdoors that range from grand vistas to familiar urban settings, some from his own neighborhood. It is his wish that his tiles will serve as a focal point for other people to observe the beauty we find in our world.

Save to Google calendar   Save to desktop calendar

Back to list
 

 

9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, March 27



Whimsy and Joy
Edgewood Gallery

Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd., Syracuse

Kathleen Crinnin: acrylic paintings
Linda Malik: sculptural ceramics
Eva Hunter: mixed media jewelry, alcohol ink paintings, oils, pastels, and silk scarves

Save to Google calendar   Save to desktop calendar

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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 27



Healing Forward: Rituals of Self Repair, Cultivation of Community, and Collective Activation
Community Folk Art Center

Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

A retrospective exhibition of over 60 multimedia and quilted works by Amber Robles-Gordon, an interdisciplinary visual artist of Puerto Rican and Caribbean descent who resides in Washington, DC. This body of work traces the through-line of healing — personal, communal, spiritual, and ecological frameworks — across the artistic career of Amber Robles-Gordon. Bringing together installations, quilts, assemblages, and collages created over more than a decade, the exhibition reveals how healing has functioned not only as a thematic concern, but as a methodology and ethical framework within the artist's practice.

Save to Google calendar   Save to desktop calendar

Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 27



Undressed: The Nude in Dutch Art, circa 1550-1800
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition, encompassing 21 works in various media, surveys the portrayal of nudity and semi-nudity in a variety of subjects rendered by Dutch artists over several centuries. It will explore how the nude has been articulated, both artistically and contextually, to disrupt traditional ideas of nudity in art, which were primarily argued by Sir Kenneth Clark in The Nude: A Study in Ideal Form (1956).

In this influential text, Clark posited that the presence of the nude in art, existed above and beyond cultural circumstances, as a timeless, almost abstract ideal. He advanced a distinction between "naked" and "nude," with the latter explained as an idealization, or an evocation of timeless ideals. To the contrary, this exhibition presents nudity in art as a phenomenon that is time-bound and culturally determined.

Save to Google calendar   Save to desktop calendar

Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 27



Possible Worlds: 20 Years of the Wynn Newhouse Awards
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

This landmark exhibition marks the 20th anniversary of the Wynn Newhouse Award, a pioneering initiative that has recognized and elevated artists of excellence who happen to live with disabilities. Established in 2006 by Wynn Newhouse, the award has championed bold, boundary-defying voices in contemporary art — highlighting practices that are as varied in form as they are unified in vision: a vision of art as a space where representation, identity, and access are not peripheral concerns, but central to the discourse.

At the heart of the exhibition is a curatorial inquiry: How do artists with disabilities navigate the art world, and the world at large, on their terms? And how does that navigation inform their work, influence its reception, and expand the field of cultural production? The goal is not to position disability as a central or singular theme, but to acknowledge it as one of many intersecting conditions that inform artistic practice. In doing so, this exhibition prompts us to reconsider who gets seen, whose experiences shape the canon, and how institutions can create more equitable conditions for artistic participation and recognition.

Exhibiting artists include Beverly Baker, Derrick Alexis Coard, Courttney Cooper, Joseph Grigley, Em Kettner, Reverend Joyce McDonald, William Scott, Kambel Smith, Katz Tepper, Melvin Way, and Peter Williams.

Save to Google calendar   Save to desktop calendar

Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 27



Laurent Craste: Iconoclasts
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

"Iconoclasts" marks the American museum debut for French-born Canadian ceramist Laurent Craste. Over the past decade, Craste has committed a wide range of indignities and abuse against his ornate vases and urns, including pummeling them with baseball bats and crowbars and piercing them with arrows. Despite the violence that runs through his work, Craste has a great passion for historical porcelain. Working with porcelain allows Craste to explore the prestige and power of upper-class society, but also inequality and the strain that is placed on working people. The anthropomorphic nature of Craste's vases echoes the human body, making it no surprise that people feel strong emotions when seeing a helpless vase struck by a baseball bat. Triggering these strong emotions in his audience allows Craste to connect on a deeper level as he asks questions about class, money, and power.

Save to Google calendar   Save to desktop calendar

Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 27



Joyce Kozloff: Contested Territories, 1983-2023
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

For more than four decades, Joyce Kozloff has explored how the entanglements of geography, history, and power influence the visual language of maps. "Contested Territories" presents a selection of Kozloff's works that uncover how maps shape our understanding of the world—not as neutral tools, but as instruments of influence, ideology, and control.

Kozloff's wide range of sources include historical maps, classroom wall maps, atlases, globes, and even satellite imagery from Google Maps. Her dense and colorful works often layer these materials with hand-painted details, collage, and intricate ornamentation. By combining sources that span centuries—from Renaissance celestial charts to contemporary digital mapping—she exposes how maps carry the legacies of empire, conflict, and shifting territorial claims.

A founding figure in the Pattern and Decoration movement, Kozloff combines meticulous craftsmanship with political critique. Her works are labor-intensive, involving the detailed process of painting, drawing, and collaging over cartographic surfaces. The resulting richly textured visual field invites viewers to look closely—and to question the conquest, division, and erasure found beneath the official surface narrative.

Whether reimagining educational globes or deconstructing colonial-era charts, Kozloff transforms maps from static documents into contested, dynamic spaces. Her work encourages viewers to reconsider how borders are drawn as well as how art can reclaim such boundaries as sites of resistance, memory, and possibility.

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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 27



Lessons in Geometry
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Artists have obsessed over the relationship between mathematics and art for millennia. As artists turned toward abstraction in the early 20th century, Europeans like Piet Mondrian used geometry to create a set of rules and parameters that guided their creative process. Meanwhile, American artists began developing their own styles and movements—particularly Abstract Expressionism, which was typified by bold, quickly executed brushwork, drips, and splashes. In the mid-20th century in the United States, artists laid the groundwork for Geometric Abstraction as a more cerebral alternative to the often macho flamboyance of Abstract Expressionism. Over the ensuing decades, artists used geometry to produce abstract works that ranged from the dazzling Op Art of Victor Vasarely to the restrained Minimalism of Sol LeWitt.

"Lessons in Geometry" traces the evolution of hard-edged abstraction in the United States as artists sought to use pure geometric forms to create works with balance, harmony, and order. For these artists, shape, line, and color took precedence over representational compositions. The Everson's collection reflects the wildly varied ways that artists have used geometry to serve their personal expression, from the analytical formulations of Robert Swain to the shaped canvases of Harmony Hammond and the spatial illusions of Tony King.

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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 27



Federico Solmi: Adrift
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Visually sumptuous and incisively satirical, Federico Solmi's multimedia works expose the excesses and contradictions of power across history and contemporary culture. Adrift presents new and recent "video paintings" alongside the monumental canvas The Ship of Fools, which reimagines Théodore Géricault's Raft of the Medusa (1818–19) through Solmi's irreverent visual language. The painting assembles historical and present-day figures, from Christopher Columbus to Elon Musk, into a chaotic allegory of a society unmoored. Evoking a contemporary America adrift amid spectacle, instability, and competing claims to power, the exhibition also includes a Virtual Reality experience that immerses visitors in Solmi's destabilizing world.

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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 27



Tal Placido: Meeting Place
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Tal Placido's large-scale abstract paintings begin with a conversation. Instead of working on blank primed canvas, Placido paints on vintage linens, embracing their stains, snags, and embellishments. A native of the Philippines, Placido is attuned to the family stories and lived experiences that she literally weaves into her work. The images she presents in Meeting Place are a record of the dialogue between experience-laden objects and an artist more concerned about thoughtful questions than concrete answers.

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12:00 PM - 5:00 PM, March 27



Beginnings: A New Century of Associated Artists of CNY
Art in the Atrium

Price: Free
City Hall Commons Atrium
201 East Washington St., Syracuse

Celebrating the 100th year of Associated Artists of CNY, the exhibit, which will feature paintings, drawings, photography, fiber art, sculpture, and fused enamel pieces.

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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 27



Freedom and Control
Brewer Harris Projects

138 Bank Alley (University Building)
Syracuse

"Freedom and Control" explores the passport as a real and imagined object, a repository of dreams and nightmares. The document's fundamental purpose has always been tied to freedom of movement — passports make it possible for some individuals to cross international borders and allow the State to convey and govern the permission to do so. While the the document may seem to provide a kind of freedom to its bearer, it often does the opposite. Passports from some countries carry almost no restrictions on travel, while passports from others severely constrain citizens' ability to leave their home country.

Working in sculpture, photography, book arts and installation, the artists in this exhibition consider, critique and deconstruct this charged document to highlight its myriad uses; as a tool of State control, an indispensable object that fixes or erases national identity, or a portal through which we might imagine other ways of being in and moving through the world.

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6:00 PM - 7:30 PM, March 27



ArtRage Goes Off the Wall
ArtRage Gallery

ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave., Syracuse

Join ArtRage for its 2nd annual ArtRage Goes Off the Wall fundraiser, where you can buy art by local artists for $25.

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7:45 PM - 11:00 PM, March 27



Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
Urban Video Project

Price: Free
Everson Museum of Art Plaza
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

The Temple of Our Survival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exploring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews conducted by the artist with local care workers, land stewards, and cultural workers in her nomadic film set and project space.

Screening begins at dusk.

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Music
 

7:00 PM, March 27



*SOLD OUT* Lil’ Ed & the Blues Imperials
The 443 Social Club

The 443 Social Club
443 Burnet Ave., Syracuse

Join the waitlist

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Theater
 

7:00 PM, March 27



Da
Redhouse
Vincent Cardinal, director

Redhouse at City Center
400 S. Salina St., Syracuse

In this Tony award-winner for best play, by Hugh Leonard, middle-aged assimilated American Charlie returns home to his native Dublin to sort through and come to terms with his relationship to this thoroughly beguiling, maddening presence in his life: "Da." Reminiscence gives way to memory and illusion as an adolescent "Charlie Then" is brought back from the past, while the man who is "Charlie Now" grapples with his own mortality, and the part of his life that will always be the irascible "Da."

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7:30 PM, March 27



The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee
Covey Theatre Company
Mike Racioppa, director

Hosmer Auditorium, Everson Museum
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Winner of the Tony and the Drama Desk Awards for Best Book, The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee has charmed audiences across the country with its effortless wit and humor. Featuring a fast-paced, wildly funny and touching book by Rachel Sheinkin and a truly fresh and vibrant score by William Finn, this bee is one unforgettable experience.

An eclectic group of six mid-pubescents vie for the spelling championship of a lifetime. While candidly disclosing hilarious and touching stories from their home lives, the tweens spell their way through a series of (potentially made-up) words, hoping never to hear the soul-crushing, pout-inducing, life un-affirming "ding" of the bell that signals a spelling mistake. Six spellers enter; one speller leaves a champion! At least the losers get a juice box.

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7:30 PM, March 27



Joe Turner's Come and Gone
Syracuse Stage
Timothy Douglas, director

Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

August Wilson's mystical and heartbreaking masterpiece.

1911. Pittsburgh. Seth Holly's boarding house is home to drifters and broken hearts, a waystation for folks biding their time. The residents include a restless musician with a wandering eye, a young woman waiting on a husband who's not coming back, and an eccentric mystic who performs rituals in the yard while helping others find their song. Enter Herald Loomis, recently freed from a Southern chain gang with his young daughter in tow and desperate to reunite with a wife who might not want to be found. A lyrical triumph from Wilson's magnificent Century Cycle, Joe Turner's Come and Gone is a haunting and poetic tale of lost souls searching for spiritual mooring in the raging sea that is America.

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7:30 PM, March 27



Steel Hearts: The John Henry Musical
The Oncenter
Sing America

Carrier Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St., Syracuse

A story of love, hope, chains, and freedom.

This electrifying production follows a free Black man in the 19th-century South as he dares to dream bigger than the chains that tried to hold him, and stronger than the machine that tried to replace him. As John lays down rail, finds love, and leads a crew toward their promised land, his story becomes the story of a people and of a nation. A love letter to the American Dream proving the power of a heart of steel against any foe, Steel Hearts is the story we need now, more than ever.

With an original Indie-Gospel score that swings like steel on rail, Steel Hearts turns the epic of John Henry into a living myth, echoing the dream of every person who has stood against the storm.

Steel Hearts is a foot-stomping, heart-pounding race for the soul, a thunderous new American musical that will have you on your feet, clapping in rhythm, and telling the tale of the American legend and American Hero, John Henry.

Tickets

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8:00 PM, March 27



Preview: A Rebel Prayer
Syracuse University Drama Department
Kathleen Wrinn, director

Storch Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

"Look the beast in the eyes, and stare. Say a rebel prayer." When a politically provocative play costs her father his life, 16-year-old Nikita and her mother are forced to flee Moscow for Domikov, a remote Russian town where tyrannical headmistress Ludmilla Mukhina rules the local school with an iron fist. Mired in grief and desperate to return home, Nikita is visited by the spirits of Pussy Riot, the real-life punk-protest collective imprisoned for their art. But when they offer Nikita one of their masks to carry on her father's legacy, Nikita is faced with a dangerous choice: submit or rebel? Book and lyrics by Eloise T. Govedare.

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Saturday, March 28, 2026


Art
 

10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 28



Gary Quirk: The Nature I See Through Clay
Baltimore Woods Weeks Art Gallery

Price: Free
Baltimore Woods Nature Center
4007 Bishop Hill Rd., Marcellus

Gary Quirk creates images in slabs of clay as a way of remembering and celebrating the world around him. According to Quirk, the images emerge from chance sightings or from dreams of sightings yet hoped for. They are derived from encounters with the outdoors that range from grand vistas to familiar urban settings, some from his own neighborhood. It is his wish that his tiles will serve as a focal point for other people to observe the beauty we find in our world.

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10:00 AM - 2:30 PM, March 28



Healing Forward: Rituals of Self Repair, Cultivation of Community, and Collective Activation
Community Folk Art Center

Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

A retrospective exhibition of over 60 multimedia and quilted works by Amber Robles-Gordon, an interdisciplinary visual artist of Puerto Rican and Caribbean descent who resides in Washington, DC. This body of work traces the through-line of healing — personal, communal, spiritual, and ecological frameworks — across the artistic career of Amber Robles-Gordon. Bringing together installations, quilts, assemblages, and collages created over more than a decade, the exhibition reveals how healing has functioned not only as a thematic concern, but as a methodology and ethical framework within the artist's practice.

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10:00 AM - 2:00 PM, March 28



Whimsy and Joy
Edgewood Gallery

Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd., Syracuse

Kathleen Crinnin: acrylic paintings
Linda Malik: sculptural ceramics
Eva Hunter: mixed media jewelry, alcohol ink paintings, oils, pastels, and silk scarves

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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 28



Tal Placido: Meeting Place
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Tal Placido's large-scale abstract paintings begin with a conversation. Instead of working on blank primed canvas, Placido paints on vintage linens, embracing their stains, snags, and embellishments. A native of the Philippines, Placido is attuned to the family stories and lived experiences that she literally weaves into her work. The images she presents in Meeting Place are a record of the dialogue between experience-laden objects and an artist more concerned about thoughtful questions than concrete answers.

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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 28



Federico Solmi: Adrift
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Visually sumptuous and incisively satirical, Federico Solmi's multimedia works expose the excesses and contradictions of power across history and contemporary culture. Adrift presents new and recent "video paintings" alongside the monumental canvas The Ship of Fools, which reimagines Théodore Géricault's Raft of the Medusa (1818–19) through Solmi's irreverent visual language. The painting assembles historical and present-day figures, from Christopher Columbus to Elon Musk, into a chaotic allegory of a society unmoored. Evoking a contemporary America adrift amid spectacle, instability, and competing claims to power, the exhibition also includes a Virtual Reality experience that immerses visitors in Solmi's destabilizing world.

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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 28



Lessons in Geometry
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Artists have obsessed over the relationship between mathematics and art for millennia. As artists turned toward abstraction in the early 20th century, Europeans like Piet Mondrian used geometry to create a set of rules and parameters that guided their creative process. Meanwhile, American artists began developing their own styles and movements—particularly Abstract Expressionism, which was typified by bold, quickly executed brushwork, drips, and splashes. In the mid-20th century in the United States, artists laid the groundwork for Geometric Abstraction as a more cerebral alternative to the often macho flamboyance of Abstract Expressionism. Over the ensuing decades, artists used geometry to produce abstract works that ranged from the dazzling Op Art of Victor Vasarely to the restrained Minimalism of Sol LeWitt.

"Lessons in Geometry" traces the evolution of hard-edged abstraction in the United States as artists sought to use pure geometric forms to create works with balance, harmony, and order. For these artists, shape, line, and color took precedence over representational compositions. The Everson's collection reflects the wildly varied ways that artists have used geometry to serve their personal expression, from the analytical formulations of Robert Swain to the shaped canvases of Harmony Hammond and the spatial illusions of Tony King.

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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 28



Joyce Kozloff: Contested Territories, 1983-2023
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

For more than four decades, Joyce Kozloff has explored how the entanglements of geography, history, and power influence the visual language of maps. "Contested Territories" presents a selection of Kozloff's works that uncover how maps shape our understanding of the world—not as neutral tools, but as instruments of influence, ideology, and control.

Kozloff's wide range of sources include historical maps, classroom wall maps, atlases, globes, and even satellite imagery from Google Maps. Her dense and colorful works often layer these materials with hand-painted details, collage, and intricate ornamentation. By combining sources that span centuries—from Renaissance celestial charts to contemporary digital mapping—she exposes how maps carry the legacies of empire, conflict, and shifting territorial claims.

A founding figure in the Pattern and Decoration movement, Kozloff combines meticulous craftsmanship with political critique. Her works are labor-intensive, involving the detailed process of painting, drawing, and collaging over cartographic surfaces. The resulting richly textured visual field invites viewers to look closely—and to question the conquest, division, and erasure found beneath the official surface narrative.

Whether reimagining educational globes or deconstructing colonial-era charts, Kozloff transforms maps from static documents into contested, dynamic spaces. Her work encourages viewers to reconsider how borders are drawn as well as how art can reclaim such boundaries as sites of resistance, memory, and possibility.

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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 28



Laurent Craste: Iconoclasts
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

"Iconoclasts" marks the American museum debut for French-born Canadian ceramist Laurent Craste. Over the past decade, Craste has committed a wide range of indignities and abuse against his ornate vases and urns, including pummeling them with baseball bats and crowbars and piercing them with arrows. Despite the violence that runs through his work, Craste has a great passion for historical porcelain. Working with porcelain allows Craste to explore the prestige and power of upper-class society, but also inequality and the strain that is placed on working people. The anthropomorphic nature of Craste's vases echoes the human body, making it no surprise that people feel strong emotions when seeing a helpless vase struck by a baseball bat. Triggering these strong emotions in his audience allows Craste to connect on a deeper level as he asks questions about class, money, and power.

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12:00 PM - 8:00 PM, March 28



Beginnings: A New Century of Associated Artists of CNY
Art in the Atrium

Price: Free
City Hall Commons Atrium
201 East Washington St., Syracuse

There will be a public reception this afternoon 2:00-4:00 pm.

Celebrating the 100th year of Associated Artists of CNY, the exhibit, which will feature paintings, drawings, photography, fiber art, sculpture, and fused enamel pieces.

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12:00 PM - 6:00 PM, March 28



Freedom and Control
Brewer Harris Projects

138 Bank Alley (University Building)
Syracuse

"Freedom and Control" explores the passport as a real and imagined object, a repository of dreams and nightmares. The document's fundamental purpose has always been tied to freedom of movement — passports make it possible for some individuals to cross international borders and allow the State to convey and govern the permission to do so. While the the document may seem to provide a kind of freedom to its bearer, it often does the opposite. Passports from some countries carry almost no restrictions on travel, while passports from others severely constrain citizens' ability to leave their home country.

Working in sculpture, photography, book arts and installation, the artists in this exhibition consider, critique and deconstruct this charged document to highlight its myriad uses; as a tool of State control, an indispensable object that fixes or erases national identity, or a portal through which we might imagine other ways of being in and moving through the world.

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12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, March 28



Possible Worlds: 20 Years of the Wynn Newhouse Awards
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

This landmark exhibition marks the 20th anniversary of the Wynn Newhouse Award, a pioneering initiative that has recognized and elevated artists of excellence who happen to live with disabilities. Established in 2006 by Wynn Newhouse, the award has championed bold, boundary-defying voices in contemporary art — highlighting practices that are as varied in form as they are unified in vision: a vision of art as a space where representation, identity, and access are not peripheral concerns, but central to the discourse.

At the heart of the exhibition is a curatorial inquiry: How do artists with disabilities navigate the art world, and the world at large, on their terms? And how does that navigation inform their work, influence its reception, and expand the field of cultural production? The goal is not to position disability as a central or singular theme, but to acknowledge it as one of many intersecting conditions that inform artistic practice. In doing so, this exhibition prompts us to reconsider who gets seen, whose experiences shape the canon, and how institutions can create more equitable conditions for artistic participation and recognition.

Exhibiting artists include Beverly Baker, Derrick Alexis Coard, Courttney Cooper, Joseph Grigley, Em Kettner, Reverend Joyce McDonald, William Scott, Kambel Smith, Katz Tepper, Melvin Way, and Peter Williams.

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12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, March 28



Undressed: The Nude in Dutch Art, circa 1550-1800
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition, encompassing 21 works in various media, surveys the portrayal of nudity and semi-nudity in a variety of subjects rendered by Dutch artists over several centuries. It will explore how the nude has been articulated, both artistically and contextually, to disrupt traditional ideas of nudity in art, which were primarily argued by Sir Kenneth Clark in The Nude: A Study in Ideal Form (1956).

In this influential text, Clark posited that the presence of the nude in art, existed above and beyond cultural circumstances, as a timeless, almost abstract ideal. He advanced a distinction between "naked" and "nude," with the latter explained as an idealization, or an evocation of timeless ideals. To the contrary, this exhibition presents nudity in art as a phenomenon that is time-bound and culturally determined.

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7:45 PM - 11:00 PM, March 28



Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
Urban Video Project

Price: Free
Everson Museum of Art Plaza
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

The Temple of Our Survival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exploring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews conducted by the artist with local care workers, land stewards, and cultural workers in her nomadic film set and project space.

Screening begins at dusk.

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Music
 

6:00 PM, March 28



Composers’ Pop-Up Concert
Society for New Music

Price: $20 adults, students free
Jazz Central
441 E. Washington St., Syracuse

Pop-Up Composers' Concert and cocktail party featuring Syracuse University composition majors. SNM musicians include Sar Strong, piano; Zachary Sweet, cello; and Jim Spadafore, saxophone.

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7:00 PM, March 28



Triple Dog Death Barrage Album Release Concert and Benefit
ArtRage Gallery

Price: Free
ArtRage Gallery
505 Hawley Ave., Syracuse

A local alternative music showcase, with proceeds benefiting Helping Hounds Dog Rescue and the Central New York Cat Coalition.

Hear performances by Syracuse bands Disinclined (shoegaze), Maryam Webster Dictionary (noise pop), Viva Whatever (post-punk), and Triple Dog Death Barrage (shoegaze), accompanied by visuals and projection art.

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7:00 PM, March 28



Candlelight Series: Candlelight Pops
Syracuse Orchestra (formerly Symphoria)

Inspiration Hall (formerly St. Peter's Church)
709 James St., Syracuse

Dance and sing along with six decades of pop and rock hits as The Syracuse Orchestra performs by candlelight.

Tickets

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7:00 PM, March 28



Adeem the Artist
The 443 Social Club

The 443 Social Club
443 Burnet Ave., Syracuse

Harvested from the roaming hills of the lower Piedmont Mountains, Adeem the Artist reimagines the soundscape of the greater American South. In short bursts of literary folk songs that draw inspiration from a full library of greater Roots sounds, Adeem traverses the complexities of political, racial violence and disparate realities with humor and elasticity.

Frenetic & electrifying; their live performances nest in the intersection of stand-up comedy, social commentary, and well-seasoned country songs that follow the likes of Tyler Childers in expanding the genre. Their thematic albums and confounding one-person show invite audiences to lead with curiosity, disarm their expectations, and warm up to the dialogue.

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7:30 PM, March 28



Donna Colton & Sam Patterelli
Steeple Coffee House

Price: $15 suggested donation covers entertainment, dessert, coffee/tea
United Church of Fayetteville
310 E. Genesee St., Fayetteville

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7:30 PM, March 28



Salix Piano Trio
Syracuse Friends of Chamber Music

Price: $30 regular, $25 seniors
Grant Middle School
2400 Grant Blvd., Syracuse

Beethoven Piano Trio op. 1, no. 1
Paul Schoenfeld Cafe Music
Mendelssohn Piano Trio, op. 49, no. 1

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Theater
 

2:00 PM, March 28



Da
Redhouse
Vincent Cardinal, director

Redhouse at City Center
400 S. Salina St., Syracuse

In this Tony award-winner for best play, by Hugh Leonard, middle-aged assimilated American Charlie returns home to his native Dublin to sort through and come to terms with his relationship to this thoroughly beguiling, maddening presence in his life: "Da." Reminiscence gives way to memory and illusion as an adolescent "Charlie Then" is brought back from the past, while the man who is "Charlie Now" grapples with his own mortality, and the part of his life that will always be the irascible "Da."

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2:00 PM, March 28



Joe Turner's Come and Gone
Syracuse Stage
Timothy Douglas, director

Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

August Wilson's mystical and heartbreaking masterpiece.

1911. Pittsburgh. Seth Holly's boarding house is home to drifters and broken hearts, a waystation for folks biding their time. The residents include a restless musician with a wandering eye, a young woman waiting on a husband who's not coming back, and an eccentric mystic who performs rituals in the yard while helping others find their song. Enter Herald Loomis, recently freed from a Southern chain gang with his young daughter in tow and desperate to reunite with a wife who might not want to be found. A lyrical triumph from Wilson's magnificent Century Cycle, Joe Turner's Come and Gone is a haunting and poetic tale of lost souls searching for spiritual mooring in the raging sea that is America.

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2:30 PM, March 28



Steel Hearts: The John Henry Musical
The Oncenter
Sing America

Carrier Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St., Syracuse

A story of love, hope, chains, and freedom.

This electrifying production follows a free Black man in the 19th-century South as he dares to dream bigger than the chains that tried to hold him, and stronger than the machine that tried to replace him. As John lays down rail, finds love, and leads a crew toward their promised land, his story becomes the story of a people and of a nation. A love letter to the American Dream proving the power of a heart of steel against any foe, Steel Hearts is the story we need now, more than ever.

With an original Indie-Gospel score that swings like steel on rail, Steel Hearts turns the epic of John Henry into a living myth, echoing the dream of every person who has stood against the storm.

Steel Hearts is a foot-stomping, heart-pounding race for the soul, a thunderous new American musical that will have you on your feet, clapping in rhythm, and telling the tale of the American legend and American Hero, John Henry.

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7:30 PM, March 28



The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee
Covey Theatre Company
Mike Racioppa, director

Hosmer Auditorium, Everson Museum
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Winner of the Tony and the Drama Desk Awards for Best Book, The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee has charmed audiences across the country with its effortless wit and humor. Featuring a fast-paced, wildly funny and touching book by Rachel Sheinkin and a truly fresh and vibrant score by William Finn, this bee is one unforgettable experience.

An eclectic group of six mid-pubescents vie for the spelling championship of a lifetime. While candidly disclosing hilarious and touching stories from their home lives, the tweens spell their way through a series of (potentially made-up) words, hoping never to hear the soul-crushing, pout-inducing, life un-affirming "ding" of the bell that signals a spelling mistake. Six spellers enter; one speller leaves a champion! At least the losers get a juice box.

Tickets

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7:30 PM, March 28



Joe Turner's Come and Gone
Syracuse Stage
Timothy Douglas, director

Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

August Wilson's mystical and heartbreaking masterpiece.

1911. Pittsburgh. Seth Holly's boarding house is home to drifters and broken hearts, a waystation for folks biding their time. The residents include a restless musician with a wandering eye, a young woman waiting on a husband who's not coming back, and an eccentric mystic who performs rituals in the yard while helping others find their song. Enter Herald Loomis, recently freed from a Southern chain gang with his young daughter in tow and desperate to reunite with a wife who might not want to be found. A lyrical triumph from Wilson's magnificent Century Cycle, Joe Turner's Come and Gone is a haunting and poetic tale of lost souls searching for spiritual mooring in the raging sea that is America.

Save to Google calendar   Save to desktop calendar

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7:30 PM, March 28



Steel Hearts: The John Henry Musical
The Oncenter
Sing America

Carrier Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St., Syracuse

A story of love, hope, chains, and freedom.

This electrifying production follows a free Black man in the 19th-century South as he dares to dream bigger than the chains that tried to hold him, and stronger than the machine that tried to replace him. As John lays down rail, finds love, and leads a crew toward their promised land, his story becomes the story of a people and of a nation. A love letter to the American Dream proving the power of a heart of steel against any foe, Steel Hearts is the story we need now, more than ever.

With an original Indie-Gospel score that swings like steel on rail, Steel Hearts turns the epic of John Henry into a living myth, echoing the dream of every person who has stood against the storm.

Steel Hearts is a foot-stomping, heart-pounding race for the soul, a thunderous new American musical that will have you on your feet, clapping in rhythm, and telling the tale of the American legend and American Hero, John Henry.

Tickets

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8:00 PM, March 28



Da
Redhouse
Vincent Cardinal, director

Redhouse at City Center
400 S. Salina St., Syracuse

In this Tony award-winner for best play, by Hugh Leonard, middle-aged assimilated American Charlie returns home to his native Dublin to sort through and come to terms with his relationship to this thoroughly beguiling, maddening presence in his life: "Da." Reminiscence gives way to memory and illusion as an adolescent "Charlie Then" is brought back from the past, while the man who is "Charlie Now" grapples with his own mortality, and the part of his life that will always be the irascible "Da."

Tickets

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8:00 PM, March 28



Opening: A Rebel Prayer
Syracuse University Drama Department
Kathleen Wrinn, director

Storch Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

"Look the beast in the eyes, and stare. Say a rebel prayer." When a politically provocative play costs her father his life, 16-year-old Nikita and her mother are forced to flee Moscow for Domikov, a remote Russian town where tyrannical headmistress Ludmilla Mukhina rules the local school with an iron fist. Mired in grief and desperate to return home, Nikita is visited by the spirits of Pussy Riot, the real-life punk-protest collective imprisoned for their art. But when they offer Nikita one of their masks to carry on her father's legacy, Nikita is faced with a dangerous choice: submit or rebel? Book and lyrics by Eloise T. Govedare.

Tickets

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Sunday, March 29, 2026


Art
 

10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 29



Joyce Kozloff: Contested Territories, 1983-2023
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

For more than four decades, Joyce Kozloff has explored how the entanglements of geography, history, and power influence the visual language of maps. "Contested Territories" presents a selection of Kozloff's works that uncover how maps shape our understanding of the world—not as neutral tools, but as instruments of influence, ideology, and control.

Kozloff's wide range of sources include historical maps, classroom wall maps, atlases, globes, and even satellite imagery from Google Maps. Her dense and colorful works often layer these materials with hand-painted details, collage, and intricate ornamentation. By combining sources that span centuries—from Renaissance celestial charts to contemporary digital mapping—she exposes how maps carry the legacies of empire, conflict, and shifting territorial claims.

A founding figure in the Pattern and Decoration movement, Kozloff combines meticulous craftsmanship with political critique. Her works are labor-intensive, involving the detailed process of painting, drawing, and collaging over cartographic surfaces. The resulting richly textured visual field invites viewers to look closely—and to question the conquest, division, and erasure found beneath the official surface narrative.

Whether reimagining educational globes or deconstructing colonial-era charts, Kozloff transforms maps from static documents into contested, dynamic spaces. Her work encourages viewers to reconsider how borders are drawn as well as how art can reclaim such boundaries as sites of resistance, memory, and possibility.

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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 29



Lessons in Geometry
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Artists have obsessed over the relationship between mathematics and art for millennia. As artists turned toward abstraction in the early 20th century, Europeans like Piet Mondrian used geometry to create a set of rules and parameters that guided their creative process. Meanwhile, American artists began developing their own styles and movements—particularly Abstract Expressionism, which was typified by bold, quickly executed brushwork, drips, and splashes. In the mid-20th century in the United States, artists laid the groundwork for Geometric Abstraction as a more cerebral alternative to the often macho flamboyance of Abstract Expressionism. Over the ensuing decades, artists used geometry to produce abstract works that ranged from the dazzling Op Art of Victor Vasarely to the restrained Minimalism of Sol LeWitt.

"Lessons in Geometry" traces the evolution of hard-edged abstraction in the United States as artists sought to use pure geometric forms to create works with balance, harmony, and order. For these artists, shape, line, and color took precedence over representational compositions. The Everson's collection reflects the wildly varied ways that artists have used geometry to serve their personal expression, from the analytical formulations of Robert Swain to the shaped canvases of Harmony Hammond and the spatial illusions of Tony King.

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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 29



Laurent Craste: Iconoclasts
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

"Iconoclasts" marks the American museum debut for French-born Canadian ceramist Laurent Craste. Over the past decade, Craste has committed a wide range of indignities and abuse against his ornate vases and urns, including pummeling them with baseball bats and crowbars and piercing them with arrows. Despite the violence that runs through his work, Craste has a great passion for historical porcelain. Working with porcelain allows Craste to explore the prestige and power of upper-class society, but also inequality and the strain that is placed on working people. The anthropomorphic nature of Craste's vases echoes the human body, making it no surprise that people feel strong emotions when seeing a helpless vase struck by a baseball bat. Triggering these strong emotions in his audience allows Craste to connect on a deeper level as he asks questions about class, money, and power.

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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 29



Tal Placido: Meeting Place
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Tal Placido's large-scale abstract paintings begin with a conversation. Instead of working on blank primed canvas, Placido paints on vintage linens, embracing their stains, snags, and embellishments. A native of the Philippines, Placido is attuned to the family stories and lived experiences that she literally weaves into her work. The images she presents in Meeting Place are a record of the dialogue between experience-laden objects and an artist more concerned about thoughtful questions than concrete answers.

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10:00 AM - 5:00 PM, March 29



Federico Solmi: Adrift
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Visually sumptuous and incisively satirical, Federico Solmi's multimedia works expose the excesses and contradictions of power across history and contemporary culture. Adrift presents new and recent "video paintings" alongside the monumental canvas The Ship of Fools, which reimagines Théodore Géricault's Raft of the Medusa (1818–19) through Solmi's irreverent visual language. The painting assembles historical and present-day figures, from Christopher Columbus to Elon Musk, into a chaotic allegory of a society unmoored. Evoking a contemporary America adrift amid spectacle, instability, and competing claims to power, the exhibition also includes a Virtual Reality experience that immerses visitors in Solmi's destabilizing world.

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12:00 PM - 8:00 PM, March 29



Beginnings: A New Century of Associated Artists of CNY
Art in the Atrium

Price: Free
City Hall Commons Atrium
201 East Washington St., Syracuse

Celebrating the 100th year of Associated Artists of CNY, the exhibit, which will feature paintings, drawings, photography, fiber art, sculpture, and fused enamel pieces.

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12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, March 29



Undressed: The Nude in Dutch Art, circa 1550-1800
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition, encompassing 21 works in various media, surveys the portrayal of nudity and semi-nudity in a variety of subjects rendered by Dutch artists over several centuries. It will explore how the nude has been articulated, both artistically and contextually, to disrupt traditional ideas of nudity in art, which were primarily argued by Sir Kenneth Clark in The Nude: A Study in Ideal Form (1956).

In this influential text, Clark posited that the presence of the nude in art, existed above and beyond cultural circumstances, as a timeless, almost abstract ideal. He advanced a distinction between "naked" and "nude," with the latter explained as an idealization, or an evocation of timeless ideals. To the contrary, this exhibition presents nudity in art as a phenomenon that is time-bound and culturally determined.

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12:00 PM - 4:00 PM, March 29



Possible Worlds: 20 Years of the Wynn Newhouse Awards
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

This landmark exhibition marks the 20th anniversary of the Wynn Newhouse Award, a pioneering initiative that has recognized and elevated artists of excellence who happen to live with disabilities. Established in 2006 by Wynn Newhouse, the award has championed bold, boundary-defying voices in contemporary art — highlighting practices that are as varied in form as they are unified in vision: a vision of art as a space where representation, identity, and access are not peripheral concerns, but central to the discourse.

At the heart of the exhibition is a curatorial inquiry: How do artists with disabilities navigate the art world, and the world at large, on their terms? And how does that navigation inform their work, influence its reception, and expand the field of cultural production? The goal is not to position disability as a central or singular theme, but to acknowledge it as one of many intersecting conditions that inform artistic practice. In doing so, this exhibition prompts us to reconsider who gets seen, whose experiences shape the canon, and how institutions can create more equitable conditions for artistic participation and recognition.

Exhibiting artists include Beverly Baker, Derrick Alexis Coard, Courttney Cooper, Joseph Grigley, Em Kettner, Reverend Joyce McDonald, William Scott, Kambel Smith, Katz Tepper, Melvin Way, and Peter Williams.

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Music
 

1:00 PM, March 29



*SOLD OUT* Shakedown Sunday
The 443 Social Club

The 443 Social Club
443 Burnet Ave., Syracuse

Shakedown Sunday is a monthly series hosted by Jeffrey Pepper Rodgers and members of Dead to the Core, with special guests, that celebrates the Grateful Dead—not just the band's originals but songs from across the roots and rock worlds they made their own.

Special guest guitarist Pete Heitzman has been creating a joyous blend of folk, blues, and soul with singer-songwriter Karen Savoca for 45 years—releasing eight albums, touring across North America (including over 200 shows with Greg Brown), and earning eight Sammy Awards and induction into the Sammy Hall of Fame.

Join the waitlist

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7:00 PM, March 29



Shakedown Sunday
The 443 Social Club

The 443 Social Club
443 Burnet Ave., Syracuse

Shakedown Sunday is a monthly series hosted by Jeffrey Pepper Rodgers and members of Dead to the Core, with special guests, that celebrates the Grateful Dead—not just the band's originals but songs from across the roots and rock worlds they made their own.

Special guest guitarist Pete Heitzman has been creating a joyous blend of folk, blues, and soul with singer-songwriter Karen Savoca for 45 years—releasing eight albums, touring across North America (including over 200 shows with Greg Brown), and earning eight Sammy Awards and induction into the Sammy Hall of Fame.

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8:00 PM, March 29



A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie
The Oncenter

War Memorial at Oncenter
800 S. State St., Syracuse

A Boogie Wit da Hoodie is a Bronx-born rapper, singer, and songwriter known for blending melodic rap with emotional storytelling.

With his introspective lyrics, melodic flow, and genuine connection to his Bronx roots, A Boogie has become a defining voice in modern hip-hop.

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Theater
 

2:00 PM, March 29



Da
Redhouse
Vincent Cardinal, director

Redhouse at City Center
400 S. Salina St., Syracuse

In this Tony award-winner for best play, by Hugh Leonard, middle-aged assimilated American Charlie returns home to his native Dublin to sort through and come to terms with his relationship to this thoroughly beguiling, maddening presence in his life: "Da." Reminiscence gives way to memory and illusion as an adolescent "Charlie Then" is brought back from the past, while the man who is "Charlie Now" grapples with his own mortality, and the part of his life that will always be the irascible "Da."

Tickets

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2:00 PM, March 29



Joe Turner's Come and Gone
Syracuse Stage
Timothy Douglas, director

Archbold Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

August Wilson's mystical and heartbreaking masterpiece.

1911. Pittsburgh. Seth Holly's boarding house is home to drifters and broken hearts, a waystation for folks biding their time. The residents include a restless musician with a wandering eye, a young woman waiting on a husband who's not coming back, and an eccentric mystic who performs rituals in the yard while helping others find their song. Enter Herald Loomis, recently freed from a Southern chain gang with his young daughter in tow and desperate to reunite with a wife who might not want to be found. A lyrical triumph from Wilson's magnificent Century Cycle, Joe Turner's Come and Gone is a haunting and poetic tale of lost souls searching for spiritual mooring in the raging sea that is America.

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2:00 PM, March 29



A Rebel Prayer
Syracuse University Drama Department
Kathleen Wrinn, director

Storch Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

"Look the beast in the eyes, and stare. Say a rebel prayer." When a politically provocative play costs her father his life, 16-year-old Nikita and her mother are forced to flee Moscow for Domikov, a remote Russian town where tyrannical headmistress Ludmilla Mukhina rules the local school with an iron fist. Mired in grief and desperate to return home, Nikita is visited by the spirits of Pussy Riot, the real-life punk-protest collective imprisoned for their art. But when they offer Nikita one of their masks to carry on her father's legacy, Nikita is faced with a dangerous choice: submit or rebel? Book and lyrics by Eloise T. Govedare.

Tickets

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2:30 PM, March 29



Steel Hearts: The John Henry Musical
The Oncenter
Sing America

Carrier Theater, Mulroy Civic Center
411 Montgomery St., Syracuse

A story of love, hope, chains, and freedom.

This electrifying production follows a free Black man in the 19th-century South as he dares to dream bigger than the chains that tried to hold him, and stronger than the machine that tried to replace him. As John lays down rail, finds love, and leads a crew toward their promised land, his story becomes the story of a people and of a nation. A love letter to the American Dream proving the power of a heart of steel against any foe, Steel Hearts is the story we need now, more than ever.

With an original Indie-Gospel score that swings like steel on rail, Steel Hearts turns the epic of John Henry into a living myth, echoing the dream of every person who has stood against the storm.

Steel Hearts is a foot-stomping, heart-pounding race for the soul, a thunderous new American musical that will have you on your feet, clapping in rhythm, and telling the tale of the American legend and American Hero, John Henry.

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Monday, March 30, 2026


Art
 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 30



Gary Quirk: The Nature I See Through Clay
Baltimore Woods Weeks Art Gallery

Price: Free
Baltimore Woods Nature Center
4007 Bishop Hill Rd., Marcellus

Gary Quirk creates images in slabs of clay as a way of remembering and celebrating the world around him. According to Quirk, the images emerge from chance sightings or from dreams of sightings yet hoped for. They are derived from encounters with the outdoors that range from grand vistas to familiar urban settings, some from his own neighborhood. It is his wish that his tiles will serve as a focal point for other people to observe the beauty we find in our world.

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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 30



Healing Forward: Rituals of Self Repair, Cultivation of Community, and Collective Activation
Community Folk Art Center

Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

A retrospective exhibition of over 60 multimedia and quilted works by Amber Robles-Gordon, an interdisciplinary visual artist of Puerto Rican and Caribbean descent who resides in Washington, DC. This body of work traces the through-line of healing — personal, communal, spiritual, and ecological frameworks — across the artistic career of Amber Robles-Gordon. Bringing together installations, quilts, assemblages, and collages created over more than a decade, the exhibition reveals how healing has functioned not only as a thematic concern, but as a methodology and ethical framework within the artist's practice.

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Tuesday, March 31, 2026


Art
 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 31



Gary Quirk: The Nature I See Through Clay
Baltimore Woods Weeks Art Gallery

Price: Free
Baltimore Woods Nature Center
4007 Bishop Hill Rd., Marcellus

Gary Quirk creates images in slabs of clay as a way of remembering and celebrating the world around him. According to Quirk, the images emerge from chance sightings or from dreams of sightings yet hoped for. They are derived from encounters with the outdoors that range from grand vistas to familiar urban settings, some from his own neighborhood. It is his wish that his tiles will serve as a focal point for other people to observe the beauty we find in our world.

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9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, March 31



Whimsy and Joy
Edgewood Gallery

Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd., Syracuse

Kathleen Crinnin: acrylic paintings
Linda Malik: sculptural ceramics
Eva Hunter: mixed media jewelry, alcohol ink paintings, oils, pastels, and silk scarves

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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, March 31



Healing Forward: Rituals of Self Repair, Cultivation of Community, and Collective Activation
Community Folk Art Center

Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

A retrospective exhibition of over 60 multimedia and quilted works by Amber Robles-Gordon, an interdisciplinary visual artist of Puerto Rican and Caribbean descent who resides in Washington, DC. This body of work traces the through-line of healing — personal, communal, spiritual, and ecological frameworks — across the artistic career of Amber Robles-Gordon. Bringing together installations, quilts, assemblages, and collages created over more than a decade, the exhibition reveals how healing has functioned not only as a thematic concern, but as a methodology and ethical framework within the artist's practice.

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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 31



Possible Worlds: 20 Years of the Wynn Newhouse Awards
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

This landmark exhibition marks the 20th anniversary of the Wynn Newhouse Award, a pioneering initiative that has recognized and elevated artists of excellence who happen to live with disabilities. Established in 2006 by Wynn Newhouse, the award has championed bold, boundary-defying voices in contemporary art — highlighting practices that are as varied in form as they are unified in vision: a vision of art as a space where representation, identity, and access are not peripheral concerns, but central to the discourse.

At the heart of the exhibition is a curatorial inquiry: How do artists with disabilities navigate the art world, and the world at large, on their terms? And how does that navigation inform their work, influence its reception, and expand the field of cultural production? The goal is not to position disability as a central or singular theme, but to acknowledge it as one of many intersecting conditions that inform artistic practice. In doing so, this exhibition prompts us to reconsider who gets seen, whose experiences shape the canon, and how institutions can create more equitable conditions for artistic participation and recognition.

Exhibiting artists include Beverly Baker, Derrick Alexis Coard, Courttney Cooper, Joseph Grigley, Em Kettner, Reverend Joyce McDonald, William Scott, Kambel Smith, Katz Tepper, Melvin Way, and Peter Williams.

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10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, March 31



Undressed: The Nude in Dutch Art, circa 1550-1800
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition, encompassing 21 works in various media, surveys the portrayal of nudity and semi-nudity in a variety of subjects rendered by Dutch artists over several centuries. It will explore how the nude has been articulated, both artistically and contextually, to disrupt traditional ideas of nudity in art, which were primarily argued by Sir Kenneth Clark in The Nude: A Study in Ideal Form (1956).

In this influential text, Clark posited that the presence of the nude in art, existed above and beyond cultural circumstances, as a timeless, almost abstract ideal. He advanced a distinction between "naked" and "nude," with the latter explained as an idealization, or an evocation of timeless ideals. To the contrary, this exhibition presents nudity in art as a phenomenon that is time-bound and culturally determined.

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Wednesday, April 1, 2026


Art
 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, April 1



Gary Quirk: The Nature I See Through Clay
Baltimore Woods Weeks Art Gallery

Price: Free
Baltimore Woods Nature Center
4007 Bishop Hill Rd., Marcellus

Gary Quirk creates images in slabs of clay as a way of remembering and celebrating the world around him. According to Quirk, the images emerge from chance sightings or from dreams of sightings yet hoped for. They are derived from encounters with the outdoors that range from grand vistas to familiar urban settings, some from his own neighborhood. It is his wish that his tiles will serve as a focal point for other people to observe the beauty we find in our world.

Save to Google calendar   Save to desktop calendar

Back to list
 

 

9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, April 1



Whimsy and Joy
Edgewood Gallery

Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd., Syracuse

Kathleen Crinnin: acrylic paintings
Linda Malik: sculptural ceramics
Eva Hunter: mixed media jewelry, alcohol ink paintings, oils, pastels, and silk scarves

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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, April 1



Healing Forward: Rituals of Self Repair, Cultivation of Community, and Collective Activation
Community Folk Art Center

Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

A retrospective exhibition of over 60 multimedia and quilted works by Amber Robles-Gordon, an interdisciplinary visual artist of Puerto Rican and Caribbean descent who resides in Washington, DC. This body of work traces the through-line of healing — personal, communal, spiritual, and ecological frameworks — across the artistic career of Amber Robles-Gordon. Bringing together installations, quilts, assemblages, and collages created over more than a decade, the exhibition reveals how healing has functioned not only as a thematic concern, but as a methodology and ethical framework within the artist's practice.

Save to Google calendar   Save to desktop calendar

Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, April 1



Undressed: The Nude in Dutch Art, circa 1550-1800
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition, encompassing 21 works in various media, surveys the portrayal of nudity and semi-nudity in a variety of subjects rendered by Dutch artists over several centuries. It will explore how the nude has been articulated, both artistically and contextually, to disrupt traditional ideas of nudity in art, which were primarily argued by Sir Kenneth Clark in The Nude: A Study in Ideal Form (1956).

In this influential text, Clark posited that the presence of the nude in art, existed above and beyond cultural circumstances, as a timeless, almost abstract ideal. He advanced a distinction between "naked" and "nude," with the latter explained as an idealization, or an evocation of timeless ideals. To the contrary, this exhibition presents nudity in art as a phenomenon that is time-bound and culturally determined.

Save to Google calendar   Save to desktop calendar

Back to list
 

 

10:00 AM - 4:00 PM, April 1



Possible Worlds: 20 Years of the Wynn Newhouse Awards
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

This landmark exhibition marks the 20th anniversary of the Wynn Newhouse Award, a pioneering initiative that has recognized and elevated artists of excellence who happen to live with disabilities. Established in 2006 by Wynn Newhouse, the award has championed bold, boundary-defying voices in contemporary art — highlighting practices that are as varied in form as they are unified in vision: a vision of art as a space where representation, identity, and access are not peripheral concerns, but central to the discourse.

At the heart of the exhibition is a curatorial inquiry: How do artists with disabilities navigate the art world, and the world at large, on their terms? And how does that navigation inform their work, influence its reception, and expand the field of cultural production? The goal is not to position disability as a central or singular theme, but to acknowledge it as one of many intersecting conditions that inform artistic practice. In doing so, this exhibition prompts us to reconsider who gets seen, whose experiences shape the canon, and how institutions can create more equitable conditions for artistic participation and recognition.

Exhibiting artists include Beverly Baker, Derrick Alexis Coard, Courttney Cooper, Joseph Grigley, Em Kettner, Reverend Joyce McDonald, William Scott, Kambel Smith, Katz Tepper, Melvin Way, and Peter Williams.

Save to Google calendar   Save to desktop calendar

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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 1



Laurent Craste: Iconoclasts
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

"Iconoclasts" marks the American museum debut for French-born Canadian ceramist Laurent Craste. Over the past decade, Craste has committed a wide range of indignities and abuse against his ornate vases and urns, including pummeling them with baseball bats and crowbars and piercing them with arrows. Despite the violence that runs through his work, Craste has a great passion for historical porcelain. Working with porcelain allows Craste to explore the prestige and power of upper-class society, but also inequality and the strain that is placed on working people. The anthropomorphic nature of Craste's vases echoes the human body, making it no surprise that people feel strong emotions when seeing a helpless vase struck by a baseball bat. Triggering these strong emotions in his audience allows Craste to connect on a deeper level as he asks questions about class, money, and power.

Save to Google calendar   Save to desktop calendar

Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 1



Lessons in Geometry
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Artists have obsessed over the relationship between mathematics and art for millennia. As artists turned toward abstraction in the early 20th century, Europeans like Piet Mondrian used geometry to create a set of rules and parameters that guided their creative process. Meanwhile, American artists began developing their own styles and movements—particularly Abstract Expressionism, which was typified by bold, quickly executed brushwork, drips, and splashes. In the mid-20th century in the United States, artists laid the groundwork for Geometric Abstraction as a more cerebral alternative to the often macho flamboyance of Abstract Expressionism. Over the ensuing decades, artists used geometry to produce abstract works that ranged from the dazzling Op Art of Victor Vasarely to the restrained Minimalism of Sol LeWitt.

"Lessons in Geometry" traces the evolution of hard-edged abstraction in the United States as artists sought to use pure geometric forms to create works with balance, harmony, and order. For these artists, shape, line, and color took precedence over representational compositions. The Everson's collection reflects the wildly varied ways that artists have used geometry to serve their personal expression, from the analytical formulations of Robert Swain to the shaped canvases of Harmony Hammond and the spatial illusions of Tony King.

Save to Google calendar   Save to desktop calendar

Back to list
 

 

11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 1



Joyce Kozloff: Contested Territories, 1983-2023
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

For more than four decades, Joyce Kozloff has explored how the entanglements of geography, history, and power influence the visual language of maps. "Contested Territories" presents a selection of Kozloff's works that uncover how maps shape our understanding of the world—not as neutral tools, but as instruments of influence, ideology, and control.

Kozloff's wide range of sources include historical maps, classroom wall maps, atlases, globes, and even satellite imagery from Google Maps. Her dense and colorful works often layer these materials with hand-painted details, collage, and intricate ornamentation. By combining sources that span centuries—from Renaissance celestial charts to contemporary digital mapping—she exposes how maps carry the legacies of empire, conflict, and shifting territorial claims.

A founding figure in the Pattern and Decoration movement, Kozloff combines meticulous craftsmanship with political critique. Her works are labor-intensive, involving the detailed process of painting, drawing, and collaging over cartographic surfaces. The resulting richly textured visual field invites viewers to look closely—and to question the conquest, division, and erasure found beneath the official surface narrative.

Whether reimagining educational globes or deconstructing colonial-era charts, Kozloff transforms maps from static documents into contested, dynamic spaces. Her work encourages viewers to reconsider how borders are drawn as well as how art can reclaim such boundaries as sites of resistance, memory, and possibility.

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11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, April 1



Federico Solmi: Adrift
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Visually sumptuous and incisively satirical, Federico Solmi's multimedia works expose the excesses and contradictions of power across history and contemporary culture. Adrift presents new and recent "video paintings" alongside the monumental canvas The Ship of Fools, which reimagines Théodore Géricault's Raft of the Medusa (1818–19) through Solmi's irreverent visual language. The painting assembles historical and present-day figures, from Christopher Columbus to Elon Musk, into a chaotic allegory of a society unmoored. Evoking a contemporary America adrift amid spectacle, instability, and competing claims to power, the exhibition also includes a Virtual Reality experience that immerses visitors in Solmi's destabilizing world.

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Theater
 

8:00 PM, April 1



A Rebel Prayer
Syracuse University Drama Department
Kathleen Wrinn, director

Storch Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

"Look the beast in the eyes, and stare. Say a rebel prayer." When a politically provocative play costs her father his life, 16-year-old Nikita and her mother are forced to flee Moscow for Domikov, a remote Russian town where tyrannical headmistress Ludmilla Mukhina rules the local school with an iron fist. Mired in grief and desperate to return home, Nikita is visited by the spirits of Pussy Riot, the real-life punk-protest collective imprisoned for their art. But when they offer Nikita one of their masks to carry on her father's legacy, Nikita is faced with a dangerous choice: submit or rebel? Book and lyrics by Eloise T. Govedare.

Tickets

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Thursday, April 2, 2026


Art
 

9:00 AM - 4:00 PM, April 2



Gary Quirk: The Nature I See Through Clay
Baltimore Woods Weeks Art Gallery

Price: Free
Baltimore Woods Nature Center
4007 Bishop Hill Rd., Marcellus

Gary Quirk creates images in slabs of clay as a way of remembering and celebrating the world around him. According to Quirk, the images emerge from chance sightings or from dreams of sightings yet hoped for. They are derived from encounters with the outdoors that range from grand vistas to familiar urban settings, some from his own neighborhood. It is his wish that his tiles will serve as a focal point for other people to observe the beauty we find in our world.

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9:30 AM - 6:00 PM, April 2



Whimsy and Joy
Edgewood Gallery

Edgewood Gallery
216 Tecumseh Rd., Syracuse

Kathleen Crinnin: acrylic paintings
Linda Malik: sculptural ceramics
Eva Hunter: mixed media jewelry, alcohol ink paintings, oils, pastels, and silk scarves

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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, April 2



Healing Forward: Rituals of Self Repair, Cultivation of Community, and Collective Activation
Community Folk Art Center

Community Folk Art Center
805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

A retrospective exhibition of over 60 multimedia and quilted works by Amber Robles-Gordon, an interdisciplinary visual artist of Puerto Rican and Caribbean descent who resides in Washington, DC. This body of work traces the through-line of healing — personal, communal, spiritual, and ecological frameworks — across the artistic career of Amber Robles-Gordon. Bringing together installations, quilts, assemblages, and collages created over more than a decade, the exhibition reveals how healing has functioned not only as a thematic concern, but as a methodology and ethical framework within the artist's practice.

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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, April 2



Possible Worlds: 20 Years of the Wynn Newhouse Awards
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

This landmark exhibition marks the 20th anniversary of the Wynn Newhouse Award, a pioneering initiative that has recognized and elevated artists of excellence who happen to live with disabilities. Established in 2006 by Wynn Newhouse, the award has championed bold, boundary-defying voices in contemporary art — highlighting practices that are as varied in form as they are unified in vision: a vision of art as a space where representation, identity, and access are not peripheral concerns, but central to the discourse.

At the heart of the exhibition is a curatorial inquiry: How do artists with disabilities navigate the art world, and the world at large, on their terms? And how does that navigation inform their work, influence its reception, and expand the field of cultural production? The goal is not to position disability as a central or singular theme, but to acknowledge it as one of many intersecting conditions that inform artistic practice. In doing so, this exhibition prompts us to reconsider who gets seen, whose experiences shape the canon, and how institutions can create more equitable conditions for artistic participation and recognition.

Exhibiting artists include Beverly Baker, Derrick Alexis Coard, Courttney Cooper, Joseph Grigley, Em Kettner, Reverend Joyce McDonald, William Scott, Kambel Smith, Katz Tepper, Melvin Way, and Peter Williams.

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10:00 AM - 8:00 PM, April 2



Undressed: The Nude in Dutch Art, circa 1550-1800
Syracuse University Art Museum

Syracuse University Art Museum, Shaffer Art Building
Syracuse University, Syracuse

This exhibition, encompassing 21 works in various media, surveys the portrayal of nudity and semi-nudity in a variety of subjects rendered by Dutch artists over several centuries. It will explore how the nude has been articulated, both artistically and contextually, to disrupt traditional ideas of nudity in art, which were primarily argued by Sir Kenneth Clark in The Nude: A Study in Ideal Form (1956).

In this influential text, Clark posited that the presence of the nude in art, existed above and beyond cultural circumstances, as a timeless, almost abstract ideal. He advanced a distinction between "naked" and "nude," with the latter explained as an idealization, or an evocation of timeless ideals. To the contrary, this exhibition presents nudity in art as a phenomenon that is time-bound and culturally determined.

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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, April 2



Laurent Craste: Iconoclasts
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

"Iconoclasts" marks the American museum debut for French-born Canadian ceramist Laurent Craste. Over the past decade, Craste has committed a wide range of indignities and abuse against his ornate vases and urns, including pummeling them with baseball bats and crowbars and piercing them with arrows. Despite the violence that runs through his work, Craste has a great passion for historical porcelain. Working with porcelain allows Craste to explore the prestige and power of upper-class society, but also inequality and the strain that is placed on working people. The anthropomorphic nature of Craste's vases echoes the human body, making it no surprise that people feel strong emotions when seeing a helpless vase struck by a baseball bat. Triggering these strong emotions in his audience allows Craste to connect on a deeper level as he asks questions about class, money, and power.

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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, April 2



Joyce Kozloff: Contested Territories, 1983-2023
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

For more than four decades, Joyce Kozloff has explored how the entanglements of geography, history, and power influence the visual language of maps. "Contested Territories" presents a selection of Kozloff's works that uncover how maps shape our understanding of the world—not as neutral tools, but as instruments of influence, ideology, and control.

Kozloff's wide range of sources include historical maps, classroom wall maps, atlases, globes, and even satellite imagery from Google Maps. Her dense and colorful works often layer these materials with hand-painted details, collage, and intricate ornamentation. By combining sources that span centuries—from Renaissance celestial charts to contemporary digital mapping—she exposes how maps carry the legacies of empire, conflict, and shifting territorial claims.

A founding figure in the Pattern and Decoration movement, Kozloff combines meticulous craftsmanship with political critique. Her works are labor-intensive, involving the detailed process of painting, drawing, and collaging over cartographic surfaces. The resulting richly textured visual field invites viewers to look closely—and to question the conquest, division, and erasure found beneath the official surface narrative.

Whether reimagining educational globes or deconstructing colonial-era charts, Kozloff transforms maps from static documents into contested, dynamic spaces. Her work encourages viewers to reconsider how borders are drawn as well as how art can reclaim such boundaries as sites of resistance, memory, and possibility.

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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, April 2



Lessons in Geometry
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Artists have obsessed over the relationship between mathematics and art for millennia. As artists turned toward abstraction in the early 20th century, Europeans like Piet Mondrian used geometry to create a set of rules and parameters that guided their creative process. Meanwhile, American artists began developing their own styles and movements—particularly Abstract Expressionism, which was typified by bold, quickly executed brushwork, drips, and splashes. In the mid-20th century in the United States, artists laid the groundwork for Geometric Abstraction as a more cerebral alternative to the often macho flamboyance of Abstract Expressionism. Over the ensuing decades, artists used geometry to produce abstract works that ranged from the dazzling Op Art of Victor Vasarely to the restrained Minimalism of Sol LeWitt.

"Lessons in Geometry" traces the evolution of hard-edged abstraction in the United States as artists sought to use pure geometric forms to create works with balance, harmony, and order. For these artists, shape, line, and color took precedence over representational compositions. The Everson's collection reflects the wildly varied ways that artists have used geometry to serve their personal expression, from the analytical formulations of Robert Swain to the shaped canvases of Harmony Hammond and the spatial illusions of Tony King.

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11:00 AM - 8:00 PM, April 2



Federico Solmi: Adrift
Everson Museum of Art

Everson Museum of Art
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

Visually sumptuous and incisively satirical, Federico Solmi's multimedia works expose the excesses and contradictions of power across history and contemporary culture. Adrift presents new and recent "video paintings" alongside the monumental canvas The Ship of Fools, which reimagines Théodore Géricault's Raft of the Medusa (1818–19) through Solmi's irreverent visual language. The painting assembles historical and present-day figures, from Christopher Columbus to Elon Musk, into a chaotic allegory of a society unmoored. Evoking a contemporary America adrift amid spectacle, instability, and competing claims to power, the exhibition also includes a Virtual Reality experience that immerses visitors in Solmi's destabilizing world.

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8:00 PM - 11:00 PM, April 2



Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
Urban Video Project

Price: Free
Everson Museum of Art Plaza
401 Harrison St., Syracuse

The Temple of Our Survival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exploring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews conducted by the artist with local care workers, land stewards, and cultural workers in her nomadic film set and project space.

Screening begins at dusk.

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Theater
 

8:00 PM, April 2



A Rebel Prayer
Syracuse University Drama Department
Kathleen Wrinn, director

Storch Theater, Syracuse Stage
820 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

"Look the beast in the eyes, and stare. Say a rebel prayer." When a politically provocative play costs her father his life, 16-year-old Nikita and her mother are forced to flee Moscow for Domikov, a remote Russian town where tyrannical headmistress Ludmilla Mukhina rules the local school with an iron fist. Mired in grief and desperate to return home, Nikita is visited by the spirits of Pussy Riot, the real-life punk-protest collective imprisoned for their art. But when they offer Nikita one of their masks to carry on her father's legacy, Nikita is faced with a dangerous choice: submit or rebel? Book and lyrics by Eloise T. Govedare.

Tickets

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