鈥楳ike Henderson: Before the Fire, 1965-1985鈥 extended through July 15
The Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum of Art at the University of California, Davis, is extending the run of 鈥淢ike Henderson: Before the Fire, 1965-1985鈥 to July 15.
鈥淏y every measure, from attendance to visitor engagement, our community has responded with unprecedented interest and enthusiasm,鈥 said Founding Director Rachel Teagle. 鈥淲e want to make sure as many people as possible are able to experience this profoundly moving and timely exhibition of Mike Henderson鈥檚 groundbreaking work.鈥
Opened Jan. 30, this ambitious exhibition brings to light the pioneering artist鈥檚 rarely seen contributions to the history of contemporary painting and filmmaking, radical Black politics and the story of California art. It marks Henderson鈥檚 first solo U.S. museum exhibition in 20 years.
By every measure, from attendance to visitor engagement, our community has responded with unprecedented interest and enthusiasm 鈥 Rachel Teagle
新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis Professor Emeritus Mike Henderson started exploring the role and responsibility of an artist early in his practice. His 鈥減rotest paintings,鈥 which he began while studying at the San Francisco Art Institute in 1965, confront the anti-Black violence of the Civil Rights era.
Thursday concert: Wendy Richman, viola, at Pitzer
April 27, 12:05 鈥 1 p.m., Recital Hall, Ann E. Pitzer Center, free, a Shinkoskey Noon Concert
The program will include Kaleidoscopes, parallax, : Sun Flower/Light, : Abstractions for Three Violas
with Ellen Ruth Rose and Joseph Donald Peterson, Adagio from String Sinfonia VIII with Emma Eyestone, Samantha Sharp, and Maya True-Fogel, and In This Watershed Moment (2022) with Emma Eyestone, Joseph Donald Peterson, Maya True-Fogel, and Samantha Sharp.
Wendy Richman has been celebrated internationally for her compelling sound and imaginative interpretations in a wide range of genres. Her debut solo album, (New Focus Recordings, 2020), features nine commissioned works for singing violist by leading contemporary composers. She is a founding member of the International Contemporary Ensemble, with whom she performs regularly in New York City and around the world, and she has performed regularly with Orpheus Chamber Orchestra and the period instrument ensemble Tesserae. Dr. Richman is a faculty member at both 新澳门六合彩内幕信息LA and California State University-Northridge (CSUN), where she teaches a variety of academic music courses and applied viola, and she is a sought-after clinician at universities and conservatories across the country.
Learn History of Tea and the Teapot in lecture
April 27, 4 鈥 5:30 p.m., Art Annex, Main Room 107
Jim Connell, professor of ceramics at Winthrop University, will investigate the histories of tea and teapots. His lecture explores some of the early myths surrounding the discovery of tea in China. From the early legendary Chinese Emperor Shen Nung to the Buddhist monk Bodhidharma, these early myths have captivated people鈥檚 imagination. 鈥淭he History of Tea and the Teapot鈥 traces the history of the first teapots i Yixing China, the advancement of porcelain teapots, and the exportation of tea and the teapot to Europe and beyond.
Organized and co-sponsored by The Global Tea Institute and the Department of Art and Art History.
'Diversity Statements...Hear Us' presented by Theatre and Dance
Friday and Sunday, April 28 and April 30, 7 鈥 8 p.m., Arena Theatre, Wright Hall, free
The 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis Department of Theatre and Dance will present Diversity Statements鈥ear Us, a choral documentary drama, on April 28 and 30 in the Arena Theatre, Wright Hall. Performances begin at 7 p.m. and are free.
Directed by Professor Margaret Laurena Kemp and written by Kemp in collaboration with students in DRA: 199, the project is composed of interviews, conversations, and material written by students. In Hear Us students tell their stories of the intent and impact of the Diversity Statement policy at 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis. The interwoven narratives expose the complexity of DEI policies, their impact on students and the afterlife of the policies in society.
The performance is the result of students, faculty and staff who have a year-long engagement with to create a fact-based performance (choral documentary drama) and film about the issues and impact of DEI (Diversity, Equity and Inclusion) Statements on students. This project was conceived by Kemp.
Hear Us was created through interviews and workshops with the cast members and members of the 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis academic community. The theatrical format of the presentation is based on and inspired by Ping Chong and Company (PCC)鈥檚 Undesirable Elements series. Kemp participated in training with PCC in 2018 and PCC artists Sara Zatz, Christina Bixland, and Jesca Prudencio led multiple workshops with the students in 2022-2023, and served in an advisory role and as creative consultants on the project鈥檚 development.
Additional creative collaborators on the project included , PhD, and PhD, co-artistic director of Davis Repertory Theatre.
Ping Chong and Company (PCC) creates theater and art that reveal beauty, invention, precision, and a commitment to social justice. Originally founded in New York City in 1975 by leading theatrical innovator Ping Chong, today the company is a highly adaptive and supportive home base for multigenerational, interdisciplinary artists with generative theater practices. The company鈥檚 work is centered on innovation, collaboration, and community engagement.
Find more information and sign up for free entrance .
Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain performs Friday
Friday, April 28, 7:30 p.m., Jackson Hall
When The Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain began in 1985, public opinion was that an orchestra consisting entirely of ukuleles in different sizes was a strange concept. This was something that attracted the founders. From the beginning, the group鈥檚 modest goals were to have fun and 鈥渘ot to lose money.鈥 Incredibly, throughout its 30-year career, the group has succeeded in both. In Europe and America, the Orchestra are best known for playing versions of famous rock songs and film themes, sometimes changing these so that the expectations of the audience are subverted. Sometimes a rock song will be changed into a jazz idiom, or sometimes several songs which are known from different genres are combined in one 鈥渟oup of contrasts.鈥
Find more information and purchaser tickets .
2023 Wennberg Orchestra Festival at Mondavi
Saturday, April 29, 2:30 p.m., Jackson Hall, Mondavi Center
The 2023 Wennberg Orchestra Festival is an artful articulation showcase of musical excellence in the DJUSD Orchestra Program from Elementary-Junior High-Senior High Schools. The program includes Davis Elementary All City Orchestra, Davis High Strings Tutoring Program Orchestra, Holmes Junior High Advanced String Quartet, Holmes Junior High Intermediate Orchestra, Holmes Junior High Advanced Orchestra, DHS Symphony Quartet, DHS Baroque Ensemble, DHS Chamber Orchestra, DHS Symphony Orchestra and features Violinist Sarah Son, the 2023 Davis High Concerto Competition Winner
Find more information and purchase tickets .
Notes on Hope: J鈥橬ai Bridges, mezzo-soprano and Ulysses Owens Jr., percussion
Sunday, April 30, 7:30 p.m., Jackson Hall, Mondavi Center
This event is a well-being event, offering special prices for faculty, staff and students. Go for those tickets. Well-Being Ticket Deals: April and May
$10 tickets for staff and faculty (limit two per person) for shows at the Mondavi Center for the Perform. Suy, May 7. Deal tickets available through May 6.
This collaboration between prolific opera superstar J鈥橬ai Bridges, and Grammy Award-winning drummer, music director, and educator, Ulysses Owens Jr. is a musical journey exploring the idea of hope rooted in the deep relationship between the voice and the drum. The program will highlight music tied to the African American experience, with works by Debussy, Ellington, Ravel, Geri Allen, spirituals, and original work from Bridges and Owens. With inspiration drawn from writers such as Lucille Clifton, Audrey Lorde, James Baldwin, and Toni Morrison, Notes on Hope is a thoughtful, melodic program featuring a full band (piano, guitar, bass and vibraphone) that provokes reflection and will leave audiences hopeful and excited about a future world that is reflective of unity, and jubilation.鈥
Find more information and purchase tickets .
Voice Students of Jonathan Nadel at Pitzer next week
May 2, 2 鈥 3:30 p.m., Recital Hall, Ann E. Pitzer Center, free
The program includes Franz Schubert: Auf dem Wasser zu singen, Der Wanderer and Gretchen am Spinnrade, Claude Debussy: Nuit d鈥櫭﹖oiles, Gustav Mahler: Excerpts from R眉ckert Lieder, W.A. Mozart: Per questa bella mano, other songs by Dowland, Britten, and Bononcini, and songs from Musicals: Into the Woods, Chicago, Little Women, Evita.
New exhibition at the Crocker: Breaking the Rules
April 30 鈥 August 27, Crocker Art Museum
In reaction to the widespread pursuit of Abstract Expressionism in the late 1940s and early 1950s, several avant-garde artists in the San Francisco Bay Area began to re-engage with the visible world, applying the gestural style of action painting to depictions of people, landscapes, and still lifes. The artist couple Paul Wonner (1920鈥2008) and William Theophilus 鈥淏ill鈥 Brown (1919鈥2012), both of whom had just completed master鈥檚 degrees in art from the University of California, Berkeley, aligned themselves with this new direction and became leading practitioners of the style known today as 鈥淏ay Area Figuration.鈥 The couple subsequently lived in various California cities, pursuing opportunities to paint and teach before finally settling in San Francisco. Over time, both artists鈥 works became less gestural and more overtly representational and, in Wonner鈥檚 case, increasingly detailed and precise. Brown became best known for his psychologically evocative landscapes with classic bathers, as well as for his lonely urban scenes. Wonner also painted figures but received greatest acclaim for his 鈥淏aroque鈥 still lifes laden with everyday objects, animals, and flowers.
Find more information .
Coming Up
Dog Doodles: mental health break with therapy fluffies
Thursday, May 4, 11 a.m. 鈥 1 p.m., Manetti Shrem Museum
Take a mental health break during midterms and sit down with a therapy fluffy to draw their portrait. Borrow a page from Roy De Forest鈥檚 work and incorporate googly eyes. Get a little silly. Boop a floof and feel less stressed. Plus, learn about on-campus resources from SHARED, a club aimed at supporting the physical and mental health of 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis Aggies.
Special thanks to Lend A Heart Animal-Assisted Therapy.
Artists in Residence: Lillian Gordis, harpsichord, with J茅r么me Hanta茂, viola da gamba
May 4, 12:05 鈥 1 p.m., Recital Hall, Ann E. Pitzer Center, free, a Shinkoskey Noon Concert
The program includes Suite in G Major (Livre III), Sonata in G Major, BWV 1027, and selections from Partita No. 6, BWV 830, Suite in D Minor.
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Media contact: Karen Nikos-Rose, 530-219-5472, kmnikos@ucdavis.edu