'Dreams, Visions, Fantasies,’ A Shinkoskey Noon Concert
Thursday, Feb. 29, 12:05- 1 p.m., Recital Hall, Ann E. Pitzer Center, free
Faythe Vollrath, harpsichordist, performs as a soloist and chamber musician throughout the United States. Hailed by the Wall Street Journal for her “subtly varied tempo and rhythm that sounds like breathing,” her solo performances include venues such as MusicSources in Berkeley, Gotham Early Music in New York City, and Bruton Parish Church in Colonial Williamsburg.
Katherine Kaiser, soprano, is an active chamber musician and soloist. Praised by the Boston Globe for the “taut intensity” of her performance of Luigi Rossi’stPianto della Maddalena, she is inspired by the drama and improvisatory character of the early Baroque.
Percussion, big bands
March 1, 2024 - 4-5 p.m. Recital Hall, Ann E. Pitzer Center, free
Chris Froh, director and ϲϿ Davis lecturer in music
Program
- Josh Gottry: Ting and Shake
- Traditional: Chilean Folk Song
- Frank Zappa: The Black Page #1
- Anders Koppel: Toccata
- Ivan Trevino: Shared Space
March 5, 2024 , 7-9 p.m., Recital Hall, Ann E. Pitzer Center,
Otto Lee, director and ϲϿ Davis lecturer in music
Program
The Big Bands will be playing the music of Miles Davis, Antonio Carlos Jobim, Billy Strayhorn, Pat Metheny, Horace Silver, and Steely Dan.
March 6, 2024 – 7 – 9 p.m., Jackson Hall, Mondavi Center, , Jackson Hall, Mondavi Center
Program
Campus Band • Garrett Rigsby and Natalie Laurie, directors
ϲϿ Davis Concert Band • Pete Nowlen, director
Event updates
The Laramie Project continues, tickets still available
Feb. 29 and March 1 at 7 p.m. and March 2 at 2 p.m., Main Theatre in Wright Hall, tickets starting at $5
Triggered by a hate crime which brought attention to the lack of hate crime laws nationwide, The Laramie Project is a riveting contemporary drama that challenges the inhabitants of a rural American community.
Written by Moisés Kaufman and members of the Tectonic Theater Project including alumnus Greg Pierotti (M.F.A., dramatic arts, ’16), the drama chronicles the reaction to the 1998 murder of gay University of Wyoming student Matthew Shepard in Laramie, Wyoming.
Read the full story on
Warning: This play is based on a true story, and includes strong language and mature content that some may find upsetting, including descriptions of homophobia, violence and death.
STILL: Racism in America, A Retrospective in Cartoons at Design Museum
Through Sunday, April 21 at 4 p.m., The Design Museum, 124 Cruess Hall, free to the public
Through Sunday, April 21 at 4 p.m., The Design Museum, 124 Cruess Hall, free to the public
The ϲϿ Davis Design Museum explores racism through cartoons in the installation “STILL: Racism in America, A Retrospective in Cartoons.” Showcasing the work of pioneering father/daughter cartoonists the late Brumsic Brandon Jr. and Barbara Brandon-Croft, the exhibition runs Jan. 23 through April 21.
See a video on the project:
Spark Your March with Art Spark
Saturdays and Sundays 1-4 p.m., Carol and Gerry Parker Art Studio at the Manetti Shrem Museum of Art, Free
This March, the theme is Yo Soy ___. Create a print that expresses who you are, completing the phrase in Malaquias Montoya’s Yo Soy Chicano with a part of your identity you want to honor.
Lara Downes and the Miró Quartet: Here on Earth
Saturday, March 2, 7:30 p.m., Vanderhoef Studio Theatre, the Mondavi Center, tickets starting at $49
Here On Earth features musical depictions of our planet earth, its evolution, and the lives of its inhabitants, expressed through music that spans centuries, from Haydn’s Sunrise Quartet to Darius Milhaud’s La Création du Monde (composed in 1923) and Clarice Assad’s A World Of Change, newly commissioned in 2023.
The concert begins with Jake Heggie’s Earthrise, reflecting on the fragility of our tiny blue planet from the perspective of the iconic photograph taken from lunar orbit during the 1968 Apollo 8 mission. Traveling through time and space, the program telescopes in to celebrate the beauties of the natural world, and explore our always-changing relationship to this changing earth that is our home
Read the Digital Program Here:
Buy Tickets Here:
Reflecting Lenses: Twenty Years of Photography starts at Gorman next week
March 6 – Sept. 1, the Gorman Museum; (closing reception for inaugural exhibition is Friday).
Note: See details about Gorman’s .
For decades, the Gorman Museum of Native American Art has hosted artists who advance Indigenous visual sovereignty – understood as the assertion of Indigenous autonomy through visual media. Photographs are now central to the museum’s collection of contemporary art. Themes that are prevalent in the collection relate to social and environmental justice, connection to homeland, and Indigenous empowerment in the contemporary world.
This exhibition presents highlights from the collection by more than two dozen Indigenous artists from North America, Aotearoa, and Australia.
Contemporary artists approach photography from a diversity of backgrounds including photojournalism, performance art, digital production, and film making. They produce visions of collective memory and counter narratives, in addition to portraits and landscapes. The subject of these images is Native presence. Many Indigenous artists have examined issues of self-representation through their artistic practice. In response, the museum uses the artists’ own words to present their ideas and artistic strategies.
Disney’s Descendants: The Musical in Woodland starts Friday
online at the Box Office (530) 666-9617, Woodland Opera House, 340 Second Street, Woodland
Disney’s Descendants: The Musical is based on the popular Disney Channel original movies. It is a brand-new musical, jam packed with comedy, adventure, Disney characters and hit songs from the films. Imprisoned on the Isle of the Lost (home of the most infamous villains who ever lived), the teenage children of Maleficent, the Evil Queen, Jafar, and Cruella De Vil have never ventured off the island…until now. They have a difficult choice to make: should they follow in their parents’ wicked footsteps or learn to be good?
Performances are set for Fridays at 7:30 p.m., Saturdays and Sundays at 2 p.m. Reserved seating is $20 Adults, $18 Seniors (62+), and $10 Children 17 and under. Balcony tickets are $12 for Adults, $7 for Children. Flex Pass specials and group rates are available.
Coming up
Visiting Artist Lecture with Kang Seung Lee next week
Thursday, March 7, 4:30-6 p.m., the Manetti Shrem Museum of Art, free
Kang Seung Lee is a multidisciplinary artist whose work frequently engages the legacy of transnational queer histories, particularly as they intersect with art history. In 2023, Lee had solo exhibitions and projects at the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Seoul, and Vincent Price Art Museum, Los Angeles. His work will be part of a Fall 2024 exhibition at the Manetti Shrem Museum.
Organized by the Department of Art and Art History. Supported by the ϲϿ Davis College of Letters and Science and co-sponsored by the Manetti Shrem Museum
Media Resources
Media contact:
- Karen Nikos-Rose, Arts Blog Editor, kmnikos@ucdavis.edu