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Page 1: Spring Arts Preview, January 13, 2015

2015

Page 2: Spring Arts Preview, January 13, 2015

2 | TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 2015 2015 Spring Arts Preview The Chronicle

Page 3: Spring Arts Preview, January 13, 2015

The Chronicle 2015 Spring Arts Preview TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 2015 | 3

Duke Jazz Ensemblewith guest artist

Dee Dee Bridgewater, vocalist

Thursday, February 198 pm, Baldwin Auditorium

General admission $10Sr. Citizens $5, students FREE

Katharina Uhde, violinR. Larry Todd, piano

Beethoven, Schubert & more

DUKE UNIVERSITYDEPARTMENT OF MUSIC

music.duke.edu

From Liszt to TodayNathan Hess, piano

PLUSChamber Music, Duke Chorale,Collegium Musicum, [dnme],

Opera Workshop, Symphony Orchestra,Wind Symphony & more! Most events are FREE!

Red ClaySaxophone Quartet

Sunday, January 253 pm, Baldwin Auditorium

Saturday, January 178 pm, Nelson Music Room

Friday, January 168 pm, Baldwin Auditorium

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COVER PHOTOS: Left column, top to bottom: 1) Nrityagram Dance Ensemble, performing at Reynolds Industries Theater on Thursday, January 22 at 8 PM; 2) Kabul, Afghanistan’ exhibition featuring work by James Longley at The Power Plant Gallery.

Middle column: 1) Jordi Savall, performing at Baldwin Auditorium on Sunday, February 1 at 3 PM. Photo by Josep Molina; 2) NASHER: Richard Joseph Anuszkiewicz, Spectral Cadmium from the portfolio Spectral Cadmiums, 1968. Screenprint on paper, edition 118/125, 26 3/4 x 26 3/4 inches. (67.9 x 67.9 cm). Collection of the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University, Durham, North Carolina. Gift of Nancy Hanks, 1971.61.3. Art © Richard Anuszkiewicz / Licensed by VAGA, New York, New York. Photo by Peter Paul Geoffrion; 3) Me Too Monologues Presents “Durham Grown”, #artstigators; 4) Liliane Lijn, Koan – Cuts III, 1971. Screenprint with collage on paper, 22 x 31 1/2 inches (55.9 x 80 cm). Collection of the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University, Durham, North Carolina. Gift of Mr. Kenneth Dorman, 1980.104.3. © Liliane Lijn. All Rights Reserved, DACS, London and ARS, New York, New York. Photo by Peter Paul Geoffrion.

Right column: 1) From Veiled Rebellion: Women in Afghanistan. Photograph by Lynsey Addario; 2) Vusi Mahlasela, performing at Reynolds Industries Theater on Wednesday, April 1 at 8 PM.

Lavar Munroe | Special to the Chronicle”Yellow Glove With Shank,” part of Area 919 Exhibit at the Nasher.

Page 4: Spring Arts Preview, January 13, 2015

4 | TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 2015 2015 Spring Arts Preview The Chronicle

Richard Anuszkiewicz, Spectral Cadmium from the portfolio Spectral Cadmiums, 1968. Screenprint on paper, edition 118/125, 26 3⁄4 x 26 3⁄4 inches. (67.9 x 67.9 cm). Collection of the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University, Durham, North Carolina. Gift of Nancy Hanks,

1971.61.3. Art © Richard Anuszkiewicz / Licensed by VAGA, New York, New York. Photo by Peter Paul Geoffrion.

Admission is free to Duke students.nasher.duke.edu/colour

On view April 2 - August 30British and American Screenprints, 1967-75

Colour Correction

VIVA ITALIA

SACR ED MUSIC IN 17TH CENTURY ROMEDuke Vespers Ensemble &Mallarmé Chamber Players

D U K E C H A PE L · S A T, A PR 1 8 , 4 : 0 0 PM

C H R I S T C H U R C H , R A L E IG H

S U N , A PR 1 9 , 3 : 0 0 PM

Brian Schmidt, Conductor tickets.duke.edu

Nasher exhibits work from Triangle-based artists

What is the first thing that comes to mind when you think of art? Is it Warhol? Picasso? Banksy, even? Art often summons the idea of untouchable icons––praised for being ahead of their time––or big names in New York’s art district. But this idea neglects the incredible talent within local communities: some of the very best work can be found right around the corner. All Duke students have to do is open our eyes to the “artists next door.” Starting Jan. 24, the Nasher Museum of Art will open its Area 919 exhibition to both Duke students and the general public. This showcase promises to be as vibrant and diverse as the city itself, solely featuring artists who live in the Raleigh-Durham Triangle area. Area 919 includes works from artists already recognized in today’s art world, as well as works from those newer to the scene.

“Area 919 is a collective effort,” Reneé Cagnina Haynes, Exhibitions and Publications Manager for the Nasher Museum of Art, said over email. “The Museum’s curatorial department spent several months reviewing the work of local artists, and studio visits were conducted with many of them.”

Through Apr. 12, students will have the opportunity to get to know the work of local artists Jeff Bell, Casey Cook, André Leon Gray, Lincoln Hancock with Yuxtapongo, Harrison Haynes, George Jenne, Stacey L. Kirby, Lavar Munroe, Damian Stamer, Bill Thelen, Hong-An Truong, Stacy Lynn Waddell and Jeff Whetstone.

“Many of the artists in the exhibition already have a connection to our programs, exhibitions, and collection,” Haynes said. “Bringing their work together under one roof with each other seemed like the next obvious step. It creates an interesting new dialogue for

not only them, but also for the viewing public.”Since Area 919 includes artists of varying

career levels, perspectives and media, Haynes believes the exhibition will “reveal the range and diversity of the Triangle’s every-growing artistic community.”

The works of both Stacy Lynn Waddell and Jeff Whetstone are already a part of the museum’s permanent collection. According to Haynes, Whetstone has also “participated in gallery talks, contributed to the Nasher’s blog and teaches from the museum’s exhibitions.” Harrison Haynes, a Durham native, is also no stranger to the Nasher, having participated in the museum’s touring exhibition, The Record: Contemporary Art & Vinyl.

“To bring them [local artists] all together and in dialogue with one another for the first time is quite exciting,” Haynes said. “We hope that viewers will discover something new and specific to the region through this exhibition, and that the artists themselves will walk away with new ideas, opportunities, and a fresh sense of community.”

Francis Curiel The Chronicle

Photos by Harrison Haynes | Special to the Chronicle

“Yuri M.” by Bill Thelen | Special to the Chronicle

Page 5: Spring Arts Preview, January 13, 2015

The Chronicle 2015 Spring Arts Preview TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 2015 | 5

Spring 2015 Calendar of Events

From the World to Lynn: Stories of Immigration.

Contemporary Art from the Collection of Blake Byrne

Miró: The Experience of Seeing

ExhibitionsKabul, Afghanistan. Panorama photographs by award-winning filmmaker James Longley, explores the Jada-e-Maiwand neighborhood of old Kabul twenty years after the Afghanistan civil war. Thru Feb 20. Nasher Museum, Power Plant Gallery. Free. (FF/CDS)

From the World to Lynn: Stories of Immigration. Andrea Patiño Contreras’s multimedia exhibit explores Lynn, Massachusetts, a hub of refugee resettlement. Thru Apr 13. Center for Documentary Studies. Free. (CDS)

Area 919: Artists in the Triangle. A survey of noteworthy work by artists who live in the Triangle and contribute to a vibrant and innovative local artist community. Jan 24 - Apr 12. Nasher Museum. (NAS)

Veiled Rebellion: Women in Afghanistan. Photojournalist Lynsey Addario’s images capture women’s lives in all areas of Afghan society. Feb 9 - Apr 18. Center for Documentary Studies. Free. (CDS)

Open This End: Contemporary Art from the Collection of Blake Byrne. An exhibition of both iconic and lesser-known works from some of the most significant and compelling artists of the last 50 years. Feb 19 - Jul 12. (NAS)

MFA|EDA 2015 Thesis Exhibition. Individual students’ shows dates TBD. Mar 20 - Apr 18. Power Plant Gallery. Free. (MFAEDA)

Colour Correction: British and American Screenprints, 1967-75. Drawn primarily from the Nasher Museum’s collection, this show examines an extremely fertile period of experimentation and productivity in the United States and Great Britain. Apr 2 - Aug 30. Nasher Museum. (NAS)

EventsJanuary 11 Le Bal Miró. Discussion and performance

exploring themes of artistic process and collaboration in Miró’s work. 2pm, Nasher Museum. Free. (NAS)

13 Cello Master Class with William Conable. 5pm, Nelson Music Room, East Duke Bldg. Free. (MUS)

15 Piano Master Class with Nathan Hess. 5pm, Baldwin Auditorium, East Campus. Free. (MUS)

Reception and Gallery Talk. An event for the exhibit From the World to Lynn: Stories of Immigration with artist Andrea Patiño Contreras. 6–8pm, Center for Documentary Studies. Free. (CDS)

Alexander Technique Master Class with

William Conable. 7:30pm, Room 101, Biddle Music Bldg. Free. (MUS)

Keep On Keepin’ On. Full Frame Winter Series, part of The Full Frame Road Show Presented by PNC. Legendary jazz musician Clark Terry, who taught Quincy Jones and mentored Miles Davis, becomes the mentor of a blind 23-year-old pianist who suffers from crippling stage fright. 7:30pm, Fletcher Hall, The Carolina Theatre. Free. (FF/CDS)

16 Film Screening: The Films of James Longley. Gaza Strip (2002), Portrait of a Boy with a Dog (1994, co-directed with Robin Hessman). Screened in conjunction with Longley’s first photographic exhibition, Kabul, Afghanistan. Power Plant Gallery. Free, but you must reserve tickets. See powerplantgallery.org for more information. (MFAEDA)

My Miró Inspiration: The Experience of Seeing in Gardens and Art. Miró tour followed by workshop at Sarah P. Duke Gardens to make sculptural arrangements from botanical and found materials. 2-5pm. $10 Duke staff/faculty; $6 Duke students. Registration required:

919-668-1707 (NAS)

Rare Music Concert: Eric Pritchard & Andrew Bonner, baroque violins; William Conable, baroque cello; Elaine Funaro, harpsichord. Works by Telemann, Cervetto, and Handel. 4:30pm, Biddle Music Bldg. Fountain Area. Free. (MUS)

From Liszt to Today: Nathan Hess, piano. Works by and inspired by Franz Liszt, including John Corigliano’s Gazebo Dances for Four Hands with pianist David Heid. 8pm, Baldwin Auditorium. Free. (MUS)

17 Katharina Uhde, violin; R. Larry Todd, piano. Works by Beethoven, Schubert, Clara Schumann, and Bach-Mendelssohn. 8pm, Nelson Music Room, East Duke Bldg. Free (MUS)

20 Public Lecture. “The Portal of Paradise: A Sculptor Talks about Carving Stone.” 5pm, Smith Warehouse, Bay 10, A266. Free. (AAHVS)

Nrityagram Dance masterclass. Nrityagram Dance Ensemble will conduct a masterclass in Odissi dance. Open to Duke students — basic level training in Indian classical dance required. 6:15pm, Arts Annex. Free. (DDP)

21 Nrityagram Lecture/Demo. Nrityagram Dance Ensemble will give a lecture-demonstration and talk about social justice and activism in their work. 4:40pm, Hull Dance Studio. Free. (DDP)

22 Annual Semans Lecture. Matthew Gale, head of displays at Tate Modern, London. 7pm, Nasher Museum. Free. (NAS)

The Overnighters. Full Frame Winter Series, part of The Full Frame Road Show Presented by PNC. A pastor sparks a controversy in his North Dakota town by opening his church doors to homeless workers who are seeking jobs at nearby oil fields. 7:30pm, Fletcher Hall, The Carolina Theatre. Free. (FF/CDS)

23 Wind Ensemble Master Class with Calefax. 5pm, Nelson Music Room, East Duke Bldg. Free. (MUS)

24 Exhibition Opening Event. Area 919: Artists in the Triangle. Cash bar and reception. 6-8pm, Nasher Museum. Free. (NAS)

25 Free Family Day. 12-4pm, Nasher Museum. (NAS)

Organ Recital Series. Chapel Organist Christopher Jacobson will present his first full recital on the Aeolian Organ. 5pm, Duke Chapel. Free. (CM)

Red Clay Saxophone Quartet. Susan Fancher, Robert Faub, Steven Stusek, and Mark Engebretson present works by Duke alumni Paul Leary & Carl Schimmel, as well as Stacy Garrop, John Anthony Lennon, & Anna Meadors. 3pm, Baldwin Auditorium. Free. (MUS)

Red Clay Saxophone Quartet

Nrityagram

Visiting Artists @ Duke 2015Kannapolis: A Moving PortraitA residency with musician Jenny Scheinman that will include the world premiere of Kannapolis: A Moving Portrait, an original live score set to archival footage taken by North Carolina filmmaker H. Lee Waters. Scheinman will create a soundtrack to accompany Waters’ films of life in the Piedmont in the early 1940s, now housed at Duke’s Rubenstein Rare Book and Manuscript Library. In collaboration with the Center for Documentary Studies, Duke’s MFA Program in Experimental and Documentary Arts, and the Department of Music, and coinciding with the launch of the H. Lee Waters digital collection online.More info: Duke Performances at dukeperformances.orgResidency: March 16-20 2015

Flamenco Vivo Carlota SantanaA dance residency with Flamenco Vivo Carlota Santana that will include artistic director Carlota Santana, dance company, and scholars of the flamenco

dance and music from Southern Spain. The residency will review the span of the flamenco history through tablao performances, class engagement and through a symposium inspired by the current exhibit “100 Years of Flamenco in New York” mounted at The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts.

More info: Duke Dance Program at danceprogram.duke.eduResidency: Spring and Fall 2015

The Visiting Artist Program of Duke University receives funding from The Duke Endowment. For more information contact the Office of the Vice Provost for the Arts, 919.684-0540 or visit our website at arts.duke.edu.

Page 6: Spring Arts Preview, January 13, 2015

6 | TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 2015 2015 Spring Arts Preview The Chronicle

Spring 2015 Calendar of Events

Duke University

Spring 2015Calendar of Events designed

by

CDS Center for Documentary Studies .....................660-3663 .................documentarystudies.duke.eduCM Chapel Music ........................................................684-3898 .................chapel.duke.eduDDP Duke Dance Program .........................................660-3354..................danceprogram.duke.eduFF Full Frame Documentary Film Festival ............687-4100 ..................fullframefest.orgMFAEDA Master of the Fine Arts in Experimental and Documentary Arts ..............660-3695 .................mfaeda.duke.eduMUS Music Department ..............................................660-3333 ..................music.duke.eduNAS Nasher Museum of Arts .....................................660-5135 ..................nasher.duke.eduSS Screen Society .....................................................660-3031 ..................ami.duke.edu/screensocietyTS Theater Studies ....................................................660-3343..................theaterstudies.duke.eduVPA Vice Provost for the Arts ....................................684-0540 .................arts.duke.edu

The Duke Arts Calendar is edited by Beverly Meek, Office of the Vice Provost for the Arts.

Events are subject to change. Please contact event sponsor for updates.

Buy tickets online at tickets.duke.edu or visit the University Box Office in the Bryan Center on West Campus, Mon-Fri, 11am-6pm, or one hour prior to performances at event venue. (919-684-4444)

Persons with disabilities who anticipate needing accommodations, or who have question about physical access, may contact the Box Office in advance of the event you wish to attend.

FOR MORE INFO

Le Joli Mai

Granito

The Visitor

Touch of Evil

Trash

Goodbye Dragon Inn

Princess Kaguya

Screen/Society All events are free and open to the general public. Unless otherwise noted, screenings are at 7pm in the Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center. (N) = Nasher Museum Auditorium. (SW) = Smith Warehouse - Bay 4, C105. (W) = Richard White Auditorium. All events subject to change – for details, updates, and additions, see: ami.duke.edu/screensociety/schedule Tournées French Film Festival (7:30pm)1/12 Le Joli Mai (The Lovely

Month of May)1/20 Camille Claudel 1915 1/27 The Missing Picture (L’image

manquante) 2/2 Approved for Adoption

(Couleur de peau: Miel)2/10 The Last of the Unjust (Le

dernier des injustes) Rights! Camera! Action! (SW) -discussion to follow each film1/22 Granito: How to Nail a

Dictator – w/ dir. Pamela Yates & producer Paco de Onís!

2/5 The One Who Builds 3/19 Escape Fire: The Fight to

Rescue American Healthcare 2015 Ethics Film Series - discussionto follow each film1/26 The Visitor (2007) 2/24 Buena Vista Social Club 3/24 Once (2006) 4/14 The Punk Singer AMI Showcase1/29 Touch of Evil (W) 2/23 Experimental Short Films

from the 52nd Ann Arbor Film Festival (W)

2/25 Goodbye, Dragon Inn 3/18 Los Angeles Plays Itself 3/30 AMI Student Film Award

screening 4/2 Sleep Dealer (location TBD - see website)Date TBD Alumni Filmmaker Homecoming series –screening + Q&A [guest filmmaker TBA]

Reel Global Cities film series1/28 [Dubai:] City of Life – introduced by miriam

cooke (AMES)2/16 [Vienna:] A City Without Jews

+ short films – introduced by Ingo Zeichner

3/23 [Mumbai:] The Lunchbox – introduced by Sumathi Ramaswamy

4/20 [Rio de Janeiro]: Trash (2014) – introduced by Miguel Rojas-Sotelo

Cine-East: East Asian Cinema2/25 Goodbye, Dragon Inn

(Taiwan) 3/25 Land of Many Palaces (China)

– Q&A w/ dir. Adam James Smith!

3/31 Sparks of Fire (China) (W) – Q&A w/ dir. Hu Jie!

4/1 Searching for Lin Zhao’s Soul (China) – Q&A w/ dir. Hu Jie!

4/7 26 Years (S. Korea)4/13 The Wind Rises (Japan,

animated) (W)4/16 The Tale of The Princess

Kaguya (Japan, animated) (W) Special Events 2/16 Birthplace (4:30pm) – Q&A to follow w/ survivor,

Henrik Grynberg Documentary film follows the journey of Jewish-

Polish writer Henryk Grynberg to the area where his family sheltered to avoid extermination during the Nazi occupation. There he finds the corpse of his father and learns that one of his Polish neighbors was the murderer.

Flamenco Vivo Carlota Santana

28 Visiting Speaker Series. Gregory Sholette (Visual Artist, Critic and Professor, Queens College, NY). Location and time TBD. Free. (AAHVS)

Gabriel Richard, violin. J.S. Bach Partitas and other works. 8pm, Nelson Music Room, East Duke Bldg. Free. (MUS)

29 Miró: Visual Poetry, readings in English and Spanish of contemporary Spanish poetry. 5:30pm, Nasher Museum. Free. (NAS)

30 Lecture Series in Musicology: Naomi Waltham-Smith (University of Pennsylvania). “Beethoven’s Blush.” 4pm, Library Seminar Room, Biddle Music Bldg. Free. (MUS)

Sacred Sound. A feature documentary-in-progress from the Center for Documentary Studies and Southern Documentary Fund’s Fresh Docs series. 7pm, Full Frame Theater, American Tobacco Campus. Free. (CDS)

February5 Spanish wine tasting. 6-8pm, Nasher Museum.

Free with Miró ticket. (NAS)

Life Itself. Full Frame Winter Series, part of The Full Frame Road Show presented by PNC. Filmmaker Steve James chronicles the life of film critic Roger Ebert, especially his career highlights, his battle with alcohol, and his sometimes ruthless rivalry with fellow critic Gene Siskel. 7:30pm, Fletcher Hall, The Carolina Theatre. Free. (FF/CDS)

Wittgenstein’s Hamlet. Mike Myers’ Senior Distinction Project. (T’15) 8pm, Brody Theater, East Campus. Free. (TS)

6 Lecture Series in Musicology: Christian Thorau (Universität Potsdam). “What Ought to be Heard: Touristic Listening and the Proliferation of Musicological Knowledge” 4pm, Library Seminar Room, Biddle Music Bldg. Free. (MUS)

Wittgenstein’s Hamlet. (See Feb. 5) 8pm. (TS)

7 Wittgenstein’s Hamlet. (See Feb. 5) 8pm. (TS)

8 Wittgenstein’s Hamlet. (See Feb. 5) 2pm. (TS)

12 Café Miró. Special Spanish menu at the Nasher Museum Café. Reservations: 919-684-6032. 5-9pm. (NAS)

Mukwerere. Jamie Bell’s and Austin Powers’ Senior Distinction Project. (T’15) 8pm, Sheafer Theater, West Campus. (TS)

13 Mukwerere. (See Feb. 12) 8pm. (TS)

14 Duke Wind Symphony: Viennese Ball. Food, music, and Viennese dance, featuring a live waltz orchestra and polka band. Dress: semi-formal to formal. 7-11pm, Freeman Center for Jewish Life. $12 per ticket, $20 for two. (MUS)

Mukwerere. (See Feb. 12) 8pm. (TS)

15 Duke Jazz Ensemble: Valentine’s Weekend Jazz Concert. Annual concert featuring the Duke University, North Carolina Central University, & UNC-Chapel Hill Jazz Ensembles. 3pm, Baldwin Auditorium. $10 gen. adm.; students & sr. citizens free. (MUS)

17 String Improv. Class with Jennifer Curtis. 5pm, Nelson Music Room, East Duke Bldg. Free. (MUS)

18 Film Screening: The Films of James Longley. Iraq in Fragments (2006), Sari’s Mother (2007). Screened in conjunction with Longley’s first photographic exhibition, Kabul, Afghanistan. Q&A with the artist following the films. Power Plant Gallery. Free, but you must reserve tickets. See powerplantgallery.org for more information. (MFAEDA)

Visiting Speaker Series. Guillermo Gómez-Peña and La Pocha Nostra (Performance Artist, Author, and Critic). Location and time TBD. Free. (AAHVS)

19 A Body in Motion. Kelly McCrum’s Senior Distinction Project (T’15). Adapted by McCrum from A Time for Dancing by Davida Wills Hurwin, the play follows two high school seniors whose lives are upended by the illness of one. 8pm, Brody Theater, East Campus. Free. (TS)

19 Duke Jazz Ensemble. John Brown, dir, with guest artist Dee Dee Bridgewater, vocalist. 8pm, Baldwin Auditorium. $10 gen. adm.; $5 sr. citizens; students free. (MUS)

20 AAHVS Graduate Student Symposium. Keynote speaker: Ignacio Adriasola (University of British Columbia). Location and time TBD. Free. (AAHVS)

Lecture Series in Musicology: Thomas Forrest Kelly (Harvard Univ.). “Words, Music, and Image in the Medieval Exultet Rolls” 5pm, Library Seminar Room, Biddle Music Bldg. Free. (MUS)

Closing Reception for Kabul, Afghanistan. The closing reception with photographer and filmmaker James Longley. Power Plant Gallery. 5pm-8pm. Free. (MFAEDA)

A Body in Motion. (See Feb. 19) 8pm. (TS)

Mementos Mori. Visiting artists Manual Cinema presents a live cinematic shadow puppet show about death and technology. 8pm. East Duke 209, East Campus. Free. (TS)

21 Jonathan Bagg, viola & Marija Stroke, piano. J.S. Bach: Sonata in D Major BWV 1028; Clara Schumann: Three Romances, Op. 22; Robert Fuchs: Fantasie Pieces, Op. 117; Shostakovich: Sonata, Op. 147. 8pm, Nelson Music Room, East Duke Bldg. Free. (MUS)

A Body in Motion. (See Feb. 19) 8pm. (TS)

22 Fred Raimi: For Cello Alone. 3pm, Baldwin Auditorium. Free. (MUS)

24 Violin Master Class with Veronika Schreiber-Kadlubkiewicz. 5pm, Nelson Music Room, East Duke Bldg. Free. (MUS)

Exhibit Talk and Book Signing. Renowned conflict photographer Lynsey Addario will talk about her work in Veiled Rebellion: Women in Afghanistan, and sign copies of her new book, It’s What I Do: A Photographer’s Life of Love and War. Reception beforehand. 6–9pm, Center for Documentary Studies. Free. (CDS)

Me Too Monologues presents Durham Grown, stories about being from both Durham and Duke. Submission Deadline: 1/18/15. 7:30pm, Duke Coffeehouse. Free. (VPA)

25 Performance Practice/Baroque Repertoire Master Class with Sarah Huebsch and Kelsey Schilling. 5pm, Nelson Music Room, East Duke Bldg. Free. (MUS)

26 Talk and Book Signing. Photographer Eric Gottesman on collaborative work with a children’s art collective in Ethiopia, featured in his new book, Shattered Flowers. 6pm, Center for Documentary Studies. Free. (CDS)

Duke Wind Symphony. Verena Mösenbichler-Bryant, dir. Dance with Us: Dance-inspired works including Shostakovich: Folk Dances, Jacques Press: Wedding Dance, Tchaikovsky: Dance of the Jesters. 8pm, Baldwin Auditorium. Free. (MUS)

27 Rare Music Concert: Music in Handel’s London. Works by J.C. Bach, Purcell, Boyce, and Handel, performed by Sarah Huebsch, oboe, and Kelsey Schilling, bassoon. 4pm, Biddle Music Bldg. Fountain Area. Free. (MUS)

Chairman Jones. A feature documentary-in-progress from the Center for Documentary Studies and Southern Documentary Fund’s Fresh Docs series. 7pm, Full Frame Theater, American Tobacco Campus. Free. (CDS)

The Passion of Flamenco: Up Close and Personal. Flamenco Vivo Carlota Santana presents a flamenco performance in a tablao (café) setting. 8pm, Motorco Music Hall. Tickets: $30 tables, $20 risers, $10 students (risers). (DDP)

28 The Passion of Flamenco: Up Close and Personal. (See Feb. 27)

Randall Love, piano. Mazurkas and Magyars: music inspired by Central European folk traditions. Works by Chopin, Bartók, and others. 8pm, Nelson Music Room, East Duke Bldg. Free. (MUS)

March

1 Organ Recital Series. Marie Rubis Bauer, acclaimed organist and harpsichordist, will give a recital on the Brombaugh and Flentrop organs. 5pm, Duke Chapel. Free. (CM)

The Passion of Flamenco: Up Close and Personal. 7pm, Motorco Music Hall (See Feb. 27)

3 yMusic. The New York ensemble in residency at Duke performs new works by Duke graduate composers. 8pm, Motorco Music Hall. $18 gen. adm.; Duke students $10. (MUS)

4 Duke Symphony Orchestra. Harry Davidson, music dir. Program: Schubert: Symphony No. 5 in Bb Major, D 485; Tchaikovsky: Romeo and Juliet: Overture Fantasy, & featuring 2014-15 Student Concerto Competition winner Chia-Rui Chang performing Mvt. 1 of Chopin’s Piano Concerto No. 2 in F minor. 8pm, Baldwin Auditorium. Free. (MUS)

8 Duke University String School. Stephanie Swisher, interim dir. 3pm. Beginning Ensembles & Intermediate I. 7pm. Intermediate II & DUSS Youth Symphony Orchestra. Baldwin Auditorium. Free. (MUS)

15 Free Family Day. 12-4pm. (NAS)

17 Duke Chorale. Rodney Wynkoop, dir. Spring Tour Concert. 8pm, Baldwin Auditorium. Free. (MUS)

18 Visiting Writer Series in Ethics, Society, and Documentary Art. Leslie Jamison (The Empathy Exams) visits Duke as the second writer in a new series from the Center for Documentary Studies and the Kenan Institute for Ethics. 7pm, Nelson Music Room. Free. (CDS)

20 Master of Fine Arts in Experimental and Documentary Arts Thesis Exhibition Kickoff. The MFA|EDA Class of 2015 thesis exhibitions begin with a kickoff celebration. Power Plant Gallery. Free. (MFAEDA)

Piano Master Class with Benjamin Hochman. 5pm, Nelson Music Room, East Duke Bldg. Free. (MUS)

Mementos Mori. Visiting artists Manual Cinema presents a live cinematic shadow puppet show about death and technology. 8pm, East Duke 209 East Campus. Free. (TS)

22 Organ Recital Series. University Organist Robert Parkins will present “German Organ Music of Three Centuries” on the Flentrop organ. 5pm, Duke Chapel. Free. (CM)

25 Visiting Speaker Series. Vesela Sretenovic (Senior Curator of Modern & Contemporary Art, The Phillips Collection, Washington DC). Location and time TBD. Free. (AAHVS)

26 Duke Players Lab Theater. 8pm, Brody Theater, East Campus. Free. (TS)

27 Earthcaster. A feature documentary-in-progress from the Center for Documentary Studies and Southern Documentary Fund’s Fresh Docs series. 7pm, Full Frame Theater, American Tobacco Campus. Free. (CDS)

ChoreoLab 2015. Dance performances choreographed by Duke faculty, students and alumni. 8pm, Reynolds Industries Theater, Bryan Center. (DDP)

27 Duke New Music Ensemble [dnme]. Vladimir Smirnov, dir. 8pm, Baldwin Auditorium. Free. (MUS)

Duke Players Lab Theater. (See March 26)

Free. (TS)

28 ChoreoLab 2015. (See March 27) (DDP)

Duke Players Lab Theater. (See March 26) Free. (TS)

29 J. S. Bach’s St. Matthew Passion. The Duke Chapel Choir presents Bach’s choral masterwork, with professional orchestra and soloists. 4pm, Duke Chapel. $20 Gen. Adm., $5 Non-Duke students, Duke students free. (CM)

30 Allan Ware, clarinet; Pamela Smits, cello; Sabine Simon, piano. 8pm, Nelson Music Room, East Duke Bldg. Free. (MUS)

31 Visiting Speaker Series. Donald Russell and Stephanie Sherman (Provisions, Washington, DC). Thru April 2. Location and time TBD. Free. (AAHVS)

Voice Master Class with Jan Cornelius. 5pm, Bone Hall, Biddle Music Bldg. Free. (MUS)

April2 Enron. By Lucy Prebble. A blend of

documentary-style realism, savage comedy, magical absurdism and epic spectacle worthy of a Greek Tragedy. 8pm, Sheafer Theater, Bryan Center. $10 General Public; $5 Students/Sr. Citizens. (TS)

3 Enron. (See April 2) 8pm. (TS)

4 Enron. (See April 2) 8pm. (TS)

5 Enron. (See April 2) 2pm. (TS)

8 Duke Symphony Orchestra. Harry Davidson, music dir. Program: Tchaikovsky: Serenade for Strings, Op. 48; W.A. Mozart: Piano Concerto No. 14 in E-flat Major, K. 449 with Cicilia Yudha, pianist; Sibelius: Symphony No. 2 in D Major, Op. 43. 8pm, Baldwin Auditorium. Free. (MUS)

9 The Full Frame Documentary Film Festival. Come to downtown Durham for the 18th annual Full Frame Documentary Film Festival, four days of incredible nonfiction film from all over the world. Tickets and passes available for purchase in early 2015 at http://www.fullframefest.org/passestickets/. (FF/CDS)

Duke University Wind Symphony. Verena Mösenbichler-Bryant, dir. Movie Night in Baldwin: Favorite movie soundtracks from Frozen, Harry Potter, Indiana Jones, The Incredibles, The Dark Knight Rises, and more. 8pm, Baldwin Auditorium. Free. (MUS)

Enron. (See April 2) 8pm. (TS)

10 The Full Frame Documentary Film Festival. (See April 9) (FF/CDS)

10 Lecture Series in Musicology: Candace Bailey (NC Central Univ.). “The Transmission of Cultural Codes in the Antebellum South: Binder’s Volumes as Musical Commonplace Books” 4pm, Library Seminar Room, Biddle Music Bldg. Free. (MUS)

Enron. (See April 2) 8pm. (TS)

11 The Full Frame Documentary Film Festival. (See April 9) (FF/CDS)

Enron. (See April 2) 8pm. (TS)

12 The Full Frame Documentary Film Festival. (See April 9) (FF/CDS)

Enron. (See April 2) 2pm. (TS)

17 Duke Chorale. Rodney Wynkoop, dir. Celebration Concert. 8pm, Biddle Music Bldg., Fountain Area. Free. (MUS)

Duke Jazz Ensemble. John Brown, dir., with guest artist Ron Carter, bass. 8pm, Reynolds Industries Theater. $10 gen. adm.; $5 sr. citizens; students free. (MUS)

18 Viva Italia: Sacred Music in 17th Century Rome. The Duke Vespers Ensemble, in collaboration with Mallarmé Chamber Players, present this concert of glorious sacred music. 4pm, Duke Chapel. $15 Gen. Adm., $5 Non-Duke students, Duke students free. (CM)

Duke Opera Workshop. Susan Dunn, dir. 8pm, Baldwin Auditorium. Free. (MUS)

19 Duke Opera Workshop. (See April 18) 3pm. (MUS)

Duke Collegium Musicum. Roman Testroet,

dir. 15th and 16th Century Polyphony. 8pm, Nelson Music Room, East Duke Bldg. Free. (MUS)

21 Student Chamber Music Recital. 7pm, Nelson Music Room, East Duke Bldg. Free. (MUS)

25 Duke University String School. Stephanie Swisher, interim dir. 3pm: Beginning Ensembles & Intermediate I. 4pm: Chamber Music Groups. 7pm: Intermediate II & DUSS Youth Symphony Orchestra. Baldwin Auditorium. Free. (MUS)

26 Documentary Project Presentations. Certificate in Documentary Studies students present a selection of work from their final projects, followed by an exhibit reception. 2-5pm, Center for Documentary Studies. Free. (CDS)

Area 919: Artists in the Triangle Nasher Museum of Art. Jan 24 - Apr 12

Lincoln Hancock with Yuxtapongo, Exploded Hipster (detail), 2012. Clothing donated by the Triangle music community, dimensions variable. Courtesy of the artist. Photo by Neill Prewitt.

Page 7: Spring Arts Preview, January 13, 2015

The Chronicle 2015 Spring Arts Preview TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 2015 | 7

Spring 2015 Calendar of Events

Duke University

Spring 2015Calendar of Events designed

by

CDS Center for Documentary Studies .....................660-3663 .................documentarystudies.duke.eduCM Chapel Music ........................................................684-3898 .................chapel.duke.eduDDP Duke Dance Program .........................................660-3354..................danceprogram.duke.eduFF Full Frame Documentary Film Festival ............687-4100 ..................fullframefest.orgMFAEDA Master of the Fine Arts in Experimental and Documentary Arts ..............660-3695 .................mfaeda.duke.eduMUS Music Department ..............................................660-3333 ..................music.duke.eduNAS Nasher Museum of Arts .....................................660-5135 ..................nasher.duke.eduSS Screen Society .....................................................660-3031 ..................ami.duke.edu/screensocietyTS Theater Studies ....................................................660-3343..................theaterstudies.duke.eduVPA Vice Provost for the Arts ....................................684-0540 .................arts.duke.edu

The Duke Arts Calendar is edited by Beverly Meek, Office of the Vice Provost for the Arts.

Events are subject to change. Please contact event sponsor for updates.

Buy tickets online at tickets.duke.edu or visit the University Box Office in the Bryan Center on West Campus, Mon-Fri, 11am-6pm, or one hour prior to performances at event venue. (919-684-4444)

Persons with disabilities who anticipate needing accommodations, or who have question about physical access, may contact the Box Office in advance of the event you wish to attend.

FOR MORE INFO

Le Joli Mai

Granito

The Visitor

Touch of Evil

Trash

Goodbye Dragon Inn

Princess Kaguya

Screen/Society All events are free and open to the general public. Unless otherwise noted, screenings are at 7pm in the Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center. (N) = Nasher Museum Auditorium. (SW) = Smith Warehouse - Bay 4, C105. (W) = Richard White Auditorium. All events subject to change – for details, updates, and additions, see: ami.duke.edu/screensociety/schedule Tournées French Film Festival (7:30pm)1/12 Le Joli Mai (The Lovely

Month of May)1/20 Camille Claudel 1915 1/27 The Missing Picture (L’image

manquante) 2/2 Approved for Adoption

(Couleur de peau: Miel)2/10 The Last of the Unjust (Le

dernier des injustes) Rights! Camera! Action! (SW) -discussion to follow each film1/22 Granito: How to Nail a

Dictator – w/ dir. Pamela Yates & producer Paco de Onís!

2/5 The One Who Builds 3/19 Escape Fire: The Fight to

Rescue American Healthcare 2015 Ethics Film Series - discussionto follow each film1/26 The Visitor (2007) 2/24 Buena Vista Social Club 3/24 Once (2006) 4/14 The Punk Singer AMI Showcase1/29 Touch of Evil (W) 2/23 Experimental Short Films

from the 52nd Ann Arbor Film Festival (W)

2/25 Goodbye, Dragon Inn 3/18 Los Angeles Plays Itself 3/30 AMI Student Film Award

screening 4/2 Sleep Dealer (location TBD - see website)Date TBD Alumni Filmmaker Homecoming series –screening + Q&A [guest filmmaker TBA]

Reel Global Cities film series1/28 [Dubai:] City of Life – introduced by miriam

cooke (AMES)2/16 [Vienna:] A City Without Jews

+ short films – introduced by Ingo Zeichner

3/23 [Mumbai:] The Lunchbox – introduced by Sumathi Ramaswamy

4/20 [Rio de Janeiro]: Trash (2014) – introduced by Miguel Rojas-Sotelo

Cine-East: East Asian Cinema2/25 Goodbye, Dragon Inn

(Taiwan) 3/25 Land of Many Palaces (China)

– Q&A w/ dir. Adam James Smith!

3/31 Sparks of Fire (China) (W) – Q&A w/ dir. Hu Jie!

4/1 Searching for Lin Zhao’s Soul (China) – Q&A w/ dir. Hu Jie!

4/7 26 Years (S. Korea)4/13 The Wind Rises (Japan,

animated) (W)4/16 The Tale of The Princess

Kaguya (Japan, animated) (W) Special Events 2/16 Birthplace (4:30pm) – Q&A to follow w/ survivor,

Henrik Grynberg Documentary film follows the journey of Jewish-

Polish writer Henryk Grynberg to the area where his family sheltered to avoid extermination during the Nazi occupation. There he finds the corpse of his father and learns that one of his Polish neighbors was the murderer.

Flamenco Vivo Carlota Santana

28 Visiting Speaker Series. Gregory Sholette (Visual Artist, Critic and Professor, Queens College, NY). Location and time TBD. Free. (AAHVS)

Gabriel Richard, violin. J.S. Bach Partitas and other works. 8pm, Nelson Music Room, East Duke Bldg. Free. (MUS)

29 Miró: Visual Poetry, readings in English and Spanish of contemporary Spanish poetry. 5:30pm, Nasher Museum. Free. (NAS)

30 Lecture Series in Musicology: Naomi Waltham-Smith (University of Pennsylvania). “Beethoven’s Blush.” 4pm, Library Seminar Room, Biddle Music Bldg. Free. (MUS)

Sacred Sound. A feature documentary-in-progress from the Center for Documentary Studies and Southern Documentary Fund’s Fresh Docs series. 7pm, Full Frame Theater, American Tobacco Campus. Free. (CDS)

February5 Spanish wine tasting. 6-8pm, Nasher Museum.

Free with Miró ticket. (NAS)

Life Itself. Full Frame Winter Series, part of The Full Frame Road Show presented by PNC. Filmmaker Steve James chronicles the life of film critic Roger Ebert, especially his career highlights, his battle with alcohol, and his sometimes ruthless rivalry with fellow critic Gene Siskel. 7:30pm, Fletcher Hall, The Carolina Theatre. Free. (FF/CDS)

Wittgenstein’s Hamlet. Mike Myers’ Senior Distinction Project. (T’15) 8pm, Brody Theater, East Campus. Free. (TS)

6 Lecture Series in Musicology: Christian Thorau (Universität Potsdam). “What Ought to be Heard: Touristic Listening and the Proliferation of Musicological Knowledge” 4pm, Library Seminar Room, Biddle Music Bldg. Free. (MUS)

Wittgenstein’s Hamlet. (See Feb. 5) 8pm. (TS)

7 Wittgenstein’s Hamlet. (See Feb. 5) 8pm. (TS)

8 Wittgenstein’s Hamlet. (See Feb. 5) 2pm. (TS)

12 Café Miró. Special Spanish menu at the Nasher Museum Café. Reservations: 919-684-6032. 5-9pm. (NAS)

Mukwerere. Jamie Bell’s and Austin Powers’ Senior Distinction Project. (T’15) 8pm, Sheafer Theater, West Campus. (TS)

13 Mukwerere. (See Feb. 12) 8pm. (TS)

14 Duke Wind Symphony: Viennese Ball. Food, music, and Viennese dance, featuring a live waltz orchestra and polka band. Dress: semi-formal to formal. 7-11pm, Freeman Center for Jewish Life. $12 per ticket, $20 for two. (MUS)

Mukwerere. (See Feb. 12) 8pm. (TS)

15 Duke Jazz Ensemble: Valentine’s Weekend Jazz Concert. Annual concert featuring the Duke University, North Carolina Central University, & UNC-Chapel Hill Jazz Ensembles. 3pm, Baldwin Auditorium. $10 gen. adm.; students & sr. citizens free. (MUS)

17 String Improv. Class with Jennifer Curtis. 5pm, Nelson Music Room, East Duke Bldg. Free. (MUS)

18 Film Screening: The Films of James Longley. Iraq in Fragments (2006), Sari’s Mother (2007). Screened in conjunction with Longley’s first photographic exhibition, Kabul, Afghanistan. Q&A with the artist following the films. Power Plant Gallery. Free, but you must reserve tickets. See powerplantgallery.org for more information. (MFAEDA)

Visiting Speaker Series. Guillermo Gómez-Peña and La Pocha Nostra (Performance Artist, Author, and Critic). Location and time TBD. Free. (AAHVS)

19 A Body in Motion. Kelly McCrum’s Senior Distinction Project (T’15). Adapted by McCrum from A Time for Dancing by Davida Wills Hurwin, the play follows two high school seniors whose lives are upended by the illness of one. 8pm, Brody Theater, East Campus. Free. (TS)

19 Duke Jazz Ensemble. John Brown, dir, with guest artist Dee Dee Bridgewater, vocalist. 8pm, Baldwin Auditorium. $10 gen. adm.; $5 sr. citizens; students free. (MUS)

20 AAHVS Graduate Student Symposium. Keynote speaker: Ignacio Adriasola (University of British Columbia). Location and time TBD. Free. (AAHVS)

Lecture Series in Musicology: Thomas Forrest Kelly (Harvard Univ.). “Words, Music, and Image in the Medieval Exultet Rolls” 5pm, Library Seminar Room, Biddle Music Bldg. Free. (MUS)

Closing Reception for Kabul, Afghanistan. The closing reception with photographer and filmmaker James Longley. Power Plant Gallery. 5pm-8pm. Free. (MFAEDA)

A Body in Motion. (See Feb. 19) 8pm. (TS)

Mementos Mori. Visiting artists Manual Cinema presents a live cinematic shadow puppet show about death and technology. 8pm. East Duke 209, East Campus. Free. (TS)

21 Jonathan Bagg, viola & Marija Stroke, piano. J.S. Bach: Sonata in D Major BWV 1028; Clara Schumann: Three Romances, Op. 22; Robert Fuchs: Fantasie Pieces, Op. 117; Shostakovich: Sonata, Op. 147. 8pm, Nelson Music Room, East Duke Bldg. Free. (MUS)

A Body in Motion. (See Feb. 19) 8pm. (TS)

22 Fred Raimi: For Cello Alone. 3pm, Baldwin Auditorium. Free. (MUS)

24 Violin Master Class with Veronika Schreiber-Kadlubkiewicz. 5pm, Nelson Music Room, East Duke Bldg. Free. (MUS)

Exhibit Talk and Book Signing. Renowned conflict photographer Lynsey Addario will talk about her work in Veiled Rebellion: Women in Afghanistan, and sign copies of her new book, It’s What I Do: A Photographer’s Life of Love and War. Reception beforehand. 6–9pm, Center for Documentary Studies. Free. (CDS)

Me Too Monologues presents Durham Grown, stories about being from both Durham and Duke. Submission Deadline: 1/18/15. 7:30pm, Duke Coffeehouse. Free. (VPA)

25 Performance Practice/Baroque Repertoire Master Class with Sarah Huebsch and Kelsey Schilling. 5pm, Nelson Music Room, East Duke Bldg. Free. (MUS)

26 Talk and Book Signing. Photographer Eric Gottesman on collaborative work with a children’s art collective in Ethiopia, featured in his new book, Shattered Flowers. 6pm, Center for Documentary Studies. Free. (CDS)

Duke Wind Symphony. Verena Mösenbichler-Bryant, dir. Dance with Us: Dance-inspired works including Shostakovich: Folk Dances, Jacques Press: Wedding Dance, Tchaikovsky: Dance of the Jesters. 8pm, Baldwin Auditorium. Free. (MUS)

27 Rare Music Concert: Music in Handel’s London. Works by J.C. Bach, Purcell, Boyce, and Handel, performed by Sarah Huebsch, oboe, and Kelsey Schilling, bassoon. 4pm, Biddle Music Bldg. Fountain Area. Free. (MUS)

Chairman Jones. A feature documentary-in-progress from the Center for Documentary Studies and Southern Documentary Fund’s Fresh Docs series. 7pm, Full Frame Theater, American Tobacco Campus. Free. (CDS)

The Passion of Flamenco: Up Close and Personal. Flamenco Vivo Carlota Santana presents a flamenco performance in a tablao (café) setting. 8pm, Motorco Music Hall. Tickets: $30 tables, $20 risers, $10 students (risers). (DDP)

28 The Passion of Flamenco: Up Close and Personal. (See Feb. 27)

Randall Love, piano. Mazurkas and Magyars: music inspired by Central European folk traditions. Works by Chopin, Bartók, and others. 8pm, Nelson Music Room, East Duke Bldg. Free. (MUS)

March

1 Organ Recital Series. Marie Rubis Bauer, acclaimed organist and harpsichordist, will give a recital on the Brombaugh and Flentrop organs. 5pm, Duke Chapel. Free. (CM)

The Passion of Flamenco: Up Close and Personal. 7pm, Motorco Music Hall (See Feb. 27)

3 yMusic. The New York ensemble in residency at Duke performs new works by Duke graduate composers. 8pm, Motorco Music Hall. $18 gen. adm.; Duke students $10. (MUS)

4 Duke Symphony Orchestra. Harry Davidson, music dir. Program: Schubert: Symphony No. 5 in Bb Major, D 485; Tchaikovsky: Romeo and Juliet: Overture Fantasy, & featuring 2014-15 Student Concerto Competition winner Chia-Rui Chang performing Mvt. 1 of Chopin’s Piano Concerto No. 2 in F minor. 8pm, Baldwin Auditorium. Free. (MUS)

8 Duke University String School. Stephanie Swisher, interim dir. 3pm. Beginning Ensembles & Intermediate I. 7pm. Intermediate II & DUSS Youth Symphony Orchestra. Baldwin Auditorium. Free. (MUS)

15 Free Family Day. 12-4pm. (NAS)

17 Duke Chorale. Rodney Wynkoop, dir. Spring Tour Concert. 8pm, Baldwin Auditorium. Free. (MUS)

18 Visiting Writer Series in Ethics, Society, and Documentary Art. Leslie Jamison (The Empathy Exams) visits Duke as the second writer in a new series from the Center for Documentary Studies and the Kenan Institute for Ethics. 7pm, Nelson Music Room. Free. (CDS)

20 Master of Fine Arts in Experimental and Documentary Arts Thesis Exhibition Kickoff. The MFA|EDA Class of 2015 thesis exhibitions begin with a kickoff celebration. Power Plant Gallery. Free. (MFAEDA)

Piano Master Class with Benjamin Hochman. 5pm, Nelson Music Room, East Duke Bldg. Free. (MUS)

Mementos Mori. Visiting artists Manual Cinema presents a live cinematic shadow puppet show about death and technology. 8pm, East Duke 209 East Campus. Free. (TS)

22 Organ Recital Series. University Organist Robert Parkins will present “German Organ Music of Three Centuries” on the Flentrop organ. 5pm, Duke Chapel. Free. (CM)

25 Visiting Speaker Series. Vesela Sretenovic (Senior Curator of Modern & Contemporary Art, The Phillips Collection, Washington DC). Location and time TBD. Free. (AAHVS)

26 Duke Players Lab Theater. 8pm, Brody Theater, East Campus. Free. (TS)

27 Earthcaster. A feature documentary-in-progress from the Center for Documentary Studies and Southern Documentary Fund’s Fresh Docs series. 7pm, Full Frame Theater, American Tobacco Campus. Free. (CDS)

ChoreoLab 2015. Dance performances choreographed by Duke faculty, students and alumni. 8pm, Reynolds Industries Theater, Bryan Center. (DDP)

27 Duke New Music Ensemble [dnme]. Vladimir Smirnov, dir. 8pm, Baldwin Auditorium. Free. (MUS)

Duke Players Lab Theater. (See March 26)

Free. (TS)

28 ChoreoLab 2015. (See March 27) (DDP)

Duke Players Lab Theater. (See March 26) Free. (TS)

29 J. S. Bach’s St. Matthew Passion. The Duke Chapel Choir presents Bach’s choral masterwork, with professional orchestra and soloists. 4pm, Duke Chapel. $20 Gen. Adm., $5 Non-Duke students, Duke students free. (CM)

30 Allan Ware, clarinet; Pamela Smits, cello; Sabine Simon, piano. 8pm, Nelson Music Room, East Duke Bldg. Free. (MUS)

31 Visiting Speaker Series. Donald Russell and Stephanie Sherman (Provisions, Washington, DC). Thru April 2. Location and time TBD. Free. (AAHVS)

Voice Master Class with Jan Cornelius. 5pm, Bone Hall, Biddle Music Bldg. Free. (MUS)

April2 Enron. By Lucy Prebble. A blend of

documentary-style realism, savage comedy, magical absurdism and epic spectacle worthy of a Greek Tragedy. 8pm, Sheafer Theater, Bryan Center. $10 General Public; $5 Students/Sr. Citizens. (TS)

3 Enron. (See April 2) 8pm. (TS)

4 Enron. (See April 2) 8pm. (TS)

5 Enron. (See April 2) 2pm. (TS)

8 Duke Symphony Orchestra. Harry Davidson, music dir. Program: Tchaikovsky: Serenade for Strings, Op. 48; W.A. Mozart: Piano Concerto No. 14 in E-flat Major, K. 449 with Cicilia Yudha, pianist; Sibelius: Symphony No. 2 in D Major, Op. 43. 8pm, Baldwin Auditorium. Free. (MUS)

9 The Full Frame Documentary Film Festival. Come to downtown Durham for the 18th annual Full Frame Documentary Film Festival, four days of incredible nonfiction film from all over the world. Tickets and passes available for purchase in early 2015 at http://www.fullframefest.org/passestickets/. (FF/CDS)

Duke University Wind Symphony. Verena Mösenbichler-Bryant, dir. Movie Night in Baldwin: Favorite movie soundtracks from Frozen, Harry Potter, Indiana Jones, The Incredibles, The Dark Knight Rises, and more. 8pm, Baldwin Auditorium. Free. (MUS)

Enron. (See April 2) 8pm. (TS)

10 The Full Frame Documentary Film Festival. (See April 9) (FF/CDS)

10 Lecture Series in Musicology: Candace Bailey (NC Central Univ.). “The Transmission of Cultural Codes in the Antebellum South: Binder’s Volumes as Musical Commonplace Books” 4pm, Library Seminar Room, Biddle Music Bldg. Free. (MUS)

Enron. (See April 2) 8pm. (TS)

11 The Full Frame Documentary Film Festival. (See April 9) (FF/CDS)

Enron. (See April 2) 8pm. (TS)

12 The Full Frame Documentary Film Festival. (See April 9) (FF/CDS)

Enron. (See April 2) 2pm. (TS)

17 Duke Chorale. Rodney Wynkoop, dir. Celebration Concert. 8pm, Biddle Music Bldg., Fountain Area. Free. (MUS)

Duke Jazz Ensemble. John Brown, dir., with guest artist Ron Carter, bass. 8pm, Reynolds Industries Theater. $10 gen. adm.; $5 sr. citizens; students free. (MUS)

18 Viva Italia: Sacred Music in 17th Century Rome. The Duke Vespers Ensemble, in collaboration with Mallarmé Chamber Players, present this concert of glorious sacred music. 4pm, Duke Chapel. $15 Gen. Adm., $5 Non-Duke students, Duke students free. (CM)

Duke Opera Workshop. Susan Dunn, dir. 8pm, Baldwin Auditorium. Free. (MUS)

19 Duke Opera Workshop. (See April 18) 3pm. (MUS)

Duke Collegium Musicum. Roman Testroet,

dir. 15th and 16th Century Polyphony. 8pm, Nelson Music Room, East Duke Bldg. Free. (MUS)

21 Student Chamber Music Recital. 7pm, Nelson Music Room, East Duke Bldg. Free. (MUS)

25 Duke University String School. Stephanie Swisher, interim dir. 3pm: Beginning Ensembles & Intermediate I. 4pm: Chamber Music Groups. 7pm: Intermediate II & DUSS Youth Symphony Orchestra. Baldwin Auditorium. Free. (MUS)

26 Documentary Project Presentations. Certificate in Documentary Studies students present a selection of work from their final projects, followed by an exhibit reception. 2-5pm, Center for Documentary Studies. Free. (CDS)

Area 919: Artists in the Triangle Nasher Museum of Art. Jan 24 - Apr 12

Lincoln Hancock with Yuxtapongo, Exploded Hipster (detail), 2012. Clothing donated by the Triangle music community, dimensions variable. Courtesy of the artist. Photo by Neill Prewitt.

Page 8: Spring Arts Preview, January 13, 2015

8 | TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 2015 2015 Spring Arts Preview The Chronicle

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sprintstorelocator.comFor tickets, visit tickets.duke.edu or call919-684-4444 l www.dukejazz.org

February

15thSunday

February

19thThursday

April17thFriday

Valentine’s Day Concertfeaturing Duke Jazz Ensemble, North Carolina Central University Jazz Ensemble and UNC-Chapel Hill Jazz EnsembleBaldwin Auditorium - 3pm

Spring Jazz at Duke!

Duke Jazz EnsemblefeaturingJohn Brown, directorwith guest artistDee Dee Bridgewater, vocalistBaldwin Auditorium - 3pm

Duke Jazz Ensemblefeaturing John Brown, directorwith guest artistRon Carter, bassReynolds Industries Theater, Bryan Center - 8pm

Valentine’s Day jazz concert promises romance

Feb. 13, the Duke University Jazz Ensemble will join ensembles from North Carolina Central University and the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill to perform a joint concert celebrating the year’s most romantic holiday. The concert series, which first began in 2004, celebrates its eleventh anniversary this year with a performance in Baldwin Auditorium.

In previous years, the list of songs performed at the concert has included classic standards of the American Songbook, like Kurt Weill’s “Mack the Knife” and Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart’s “My Funny Valentine,” as well as lesser-known pieces such as Antonio Carlos Jobim’s “A Felicidade” and Horace Silver’s “Summer in Central Park.” The themes of the compositions have covered the various aspects of love—the danger, the giddiness, the tranquility and the heartbreak. This year’s slate of music should prove to be thematically similar to years past. Listening to all of this sensual jazz should be enticing to students and community members alike as a potential Valentine’s Day date.

The concert series not only involves a repertoire of romantic music, but it also facilitates a kind of romance––or a friendly relationship, at least––between the three traditionally rival universities playing in the joint concert. Setting aside historical enmity, the universities instead jointly direct their energies toward promoting the arts and celebrating the romantic holiday.

Through the eleven years the concert has existed, people throughout the Research

Triangle area have been able to experience the three schools’ jazzy solidarity. After all, it would be difficult to find a better day than Valentine’s Day to reconcile differences and forget about past antagonisms.

“The concert moves from school to school, giving each a chance to be the host,” said Duke University Music Department publicist Elizabeth Thompson in a press release provided to the Chronicle.

Last year’s concert was held at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, and next year’s will be held at North Carolina Central University.

In hewing to tradition, the three ensembles will each perform a set, then join together for a grand finale where all of the groups will play a few songs with each other. Duke’s ensemble, led by noted professor and jazz scholar John Brown, will be the first group to perform.

As Thompson notes, the concert comes “at a time of the year where sports rivalries are often very high.” This year is no exception. The concert will take place just five days before the Duke men’s basketball team takes on UNC in Cameron Indoor Stadium.

“I’ll go to the concert regardless of who is playing,” said Duke senior Nathan Prabhu. “I’ll be cheering for Duke in the game, obviously, but I would not be a bad Blue Devil if I went to go support an art I enjoy immensely.”

Despite the inherent tension between the two campuses, Duke students are willing to make concessions and listen to UNC’s noted jazz performing ensemble.

“UNC sucks. But jazz is awesome,” continued Prabhu. “I think it is an under-appreciated genre of music by people our age, and I cannot wait to bring some of my close friends to the concert.”

Drew HaskinsLocal Arts Editor

Special to the Chronicle

Page 9: Spring Arts Preview, January 13, 2015

The Chronicle 2015 Spring Arts Preview TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 2015 | 9

J . S . BACH

ST. M ATTHEW

PASSIONDuke Chapel Choir & Orchestra Pro Cantores

D U K E C H A PE L · S U N , M A R 2 9 , 4 : 0 0 PM

Rodney Wynkoop, Conductortickets.duke.edu

Duke University Department of Theater Studies presents...

More info: theaterstudies.duke.edu

Wittgenstein’sHamlet

(Mike Myers’ Senior Distinction Project)Feb. 5 - 7 at 8 pm;

Feb 8 at 2 pmBrody Theater, East Campus

Mukwerere(Jamie Bell’s and

Austin Powers’ Senior Distinction Project) Feb. 12-14 at 8 pmSheafer Lab Theater,

West Campus

A Body in Motion (Kelly McCrum’s Senior

Distinction Project) Feb. 19-21 at 8 pm

Brody Theater, East Campus

Mementos MoriA stunning multimedia piece

brought by visiting artists from Chicago

March 20 at 8 pm209 East Duke, East Campus

Duke Players Lab Theater

March 26-28 at 8 pmBrody Theater, East Campus

EnronTheater Studies alum Talya

Klein will direct this timely play by Lucy Prebble - a blend of documentary-style realism,

savage comedy, magical absurdism and epic spectacle worthy of a Greek Tragedy.April 2-4 & 9-11 at 8 pm;

April 5 & 12 at 2 pm Sheafer Lab Theater,

West Campus

Page 10: Spring Arts Preview, January 13, 2015

10 | TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 2015 2015 Spring Arts Preview The Chronicle

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From the World to Lynn: Stories of Immigration

“Can you hear it?” I asked, looking at Andrea Patiño as she listened to her exhibit.

She focused a little bit, narrowing her eyes at the encased iPad in front of her.

“Yeah…but it’s really quiet.” She took the headphones off and set them back down. “Okay. That’s a good thing to know.”

I waited a little bit, not wanting to distract her from making a mental note of a possible improvement in her exhibit. Her care and attention to detail were apparent.

“Okay. Anyway!” she said, laughing.We were walking through From the World to Lynn: Stories

of Immigration, a new multi-media exhibit at the Center for Documentary Studies created by Patiño based on her

experiences with immigrants in the Massachusetts city of Lynn. It chronicles the stories of five immigrants and refugees in the city. Earlier that week, we had chatted on the phone for some time as she gave me a description of her work and the exhibit. Now, we were both walking through the exhibit for the first time.

Patiño, one of the Center’s Lewis Hine Fellows, graduated from Duke in 2012 and was in Lynn for about 10 months as part of her work for the fellowship. As a Hine Fellow, she was paired up with the non-profit Raw Art Works in Lynn. She also worked on an independent project, which became From the World to Lynn.

“I was always interested in immigration,” she explained over the phone. “As an immigrant myself, it’s been something that I was always fascinated by. I became very interested in that idea and reached out to a few resettlement agencies and stated interviewing people.”

The exhibit, which spans two floors at the Center,

contains stark, black and white portraits mounted on the walls, audio listening stations and iPad stations to look at the interactive website.

At one point, I asked Patiño why she chose such an array of mediums to tell her story.

“I wanted to have the portraits displayed with audio in a way that you could look at the person and hear that person talking,” she explained. “I recorded audio because I wanted them to be the ones that were telling the story.”

And, honestly, the exhibit feels very much like how she described it over the phone. Deeply personal, close-up shots greet visitors to the exhibit. Each of the five people that Patiño interviewed has their own little section of the exhibit. In the area for Antonio, an immigrant from El Salvador that entered the country as an unaccompanied minor, emotionally charged pictures show him at work in a taqueria. Even though the photos are in black and white, or perhaps because they are in black and white, the emotion within each photo is vivid and powerful.

Iraqi refugees huddled together in an office seem to say so much more when paired with the story of a mother whose son, a translator for the coalition forces in Iraq, was murdered. The story of the gently smiling man becomes more powerful when he speaks of his grandmother as his best friend, even though he was never able to meet her in person.

While I tried to soak in all of the details on display, Patiño seemed to be everywhere at once, even while we were talking. She described the pictures to me as her eyes swept over her work. After she recalled an Iraqi woman whose husband and three kids were killed, prompting her to leave the country, she leaned back against the wall.

“A lot of the Iraqi stories were really hard,” she said quietly.

I paused, not knowing what to say.“You’re there, and you’re empathetic, of course,”

she continued. “But there’s just no way you will ever understand some of the pain that some of these stories carry.”

In that moment, I realized how much Patiño has carried with her as she tells these intensely moving and tragic stories. Somehow, her optimism shines through. She speaks dearly and lovingly of these immigrants and refugees, expressing hope for their futures and describing how much joy they brought to their communities.

Patiño also told the story of Lynn. Among the 90,000 citizens of Lynn, almost 30% are foreign-born. A city that used to be very important for shoe-manufacturing, it declined in population after World War II. Now, General Electric and a few shoe-manufacturing companies still reside in the town. For the most part, though, it has remained a “refugee hub,” where many immigrants and refugees stop on their way into the United States. Pairing this big-picture view of the city with the deeply personal

Sid GopinathPlayground Editor

Page 11: Spring Arts Preview, January 13, 2015

The Chronicle 2015 Spring Arts Preview TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 2015 | 11

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stories of five immigrants and refugees gives viewers to the exhibit two powerful, contrasting experiences.

Although it is clear that Patiño still wants to tidy up a few things in the exhibit, it seemed like a very complete and compelling story to me. As I put on my coat, I asked her if she wishes she could have done anything differently.

“I wish I could have had more stories featured. More material,” she replied.

I mention that it’s always easy to want more time. She shrugs.

“Yeah. But I think by the time I figured

out what I wanted more or less, or at least the concept, I would have liked more time.”

Patiño smiled as she shook my hand. I walked to the door, expecting to see her packing up too, but she turned back to the exhibit. When she saw me looking, she smiled again.

“I’ll spend a little bit more time here.”

The online portion of the exhibit can be viewed online at http://stories-of-lynn.com/

Andrea Patiño’s personal website can be found at http://www.andreapatino.com/

Andrea Patiño Contreras | The Chronicle

Page 12: Spring Arts Preview, January 13, 2015

12 | TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 2015 2015 Spring Arts Preview The Chronicle

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