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15 Sunday / February 15, 2015

Exhibits at the IU Art Museum

12:00 pm to 05:00 pm
IU Art Museum, 1133 E. 7th Street
http://www.artmuseum.iu.edu

Hours: Tuesday – Saturday: 10:00 – 5:00 p.m. Sunday: Noon – 5:00 p.m.

New in the Galleries:

Onya LaTour: Pioneering Modern Art in Indiana
Continuing through May 10, 2015
Gallery of the Art of the Western World, Doris Steinmetz Kellett Endowed Gallery of Twentieth-Century Art, first floor
In 1941 Onya LaTour opened the Indiana Museum of Modern Art near Nashville, Indiana, creating a stir in local art circles. Two works from her personal collection are featured in this installation presented in conjunction with Onya LaTour on view at the Indianapolis Museum of Art this fall, to which the IU Art Museum loaned four pieces.

Focalpoint: Traditional Changes: Art from the American Southwest
Continuing through February 15, 2015
What does it mean to call an object “traditional” or “authentically Native American”? Explore these questions through examples of basketry, ceramics, textiles, and jewelry that came into being as a result of interactions with other Native American groups, contact with non-Native admirers and markets, or particular happenstances in a community’s history. Organized by Emma Kessler, curatorial assistant for the arts of Africa, the South Pacific, and the Americas.

WWI War Bond Posters
Continuing through May 24, 2015
During World War I, mass-produced color posters encouraged enlistment, helped raise capital for the war effort, and solidified public opinion against the enemy. Two vintage posters for war bonds, one American and one French, are featured: although both depict a German soldier, they have very different styles and impacts.

Nature’s Small Wonders: Photographs by Ansel Adams
Continuing through May 24, 2015
America’s most famous nature photographer, Adams was also an ardent conservationist who served on the board of directors for the Sierra Club for thirty-seven years and was active in the Wilderness Society. He used his dramatic black-and-white photographs to encourage the preservation of America’s natural wonders, particularly those found in the U.S. National Parks.

This installation is on view from January 13 through May 24, 2015, in the Gallery of the Art of the Western World, Doris Steinmetz Kellett Endowed Gallery of Twentieth-Century Art. It is presented in conjunction with the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Sycamore Land Trust, whose mission is to protect the beautiful natural and agricultural landscape of southern Indiana.

Finding Atget
Continueing though May 24, 2015
French photographer Eugène Atget’s imagery mixed a nineteenth-century aesthetic with a modern sensibility, garnering him admiration and respect from the young Berenice Abbott, who became his champion. This installation features a vintage print by Atget and several later prints from his original negatives.

Women behind the Camera
Continuing through May 24, 2015
The world of professional photography in the early- to mid-twentieth century was largely a men’s club, but a small group of talented women paved the way for future generations of female “lensmen.” Portraits by three of these pioneers—Imogen Cunningham, Berenice Abbott, and Toni Frissell—are featured.

Pop Textiles
Continuing through May 24, 2015
Textiles designed by Pop artists Roy Lichtenstein, Richard Lindner, and Claes Oldenburg are featured. These bold and inventive compositions on fabric blur the boundaries between fine art, craft, and industrial production.

Robert Salmon: Romantic Painter
Continuing through May 24, 2015
Two paintings by Robert Salmon help elucidate the artist’s foundation in English Romanticism, which continued to inform his painting after his move to Boston in 1828.

Special Program: Show & Tell: A Collaborative Art Exhibit
Continuing through February 28, 2015
IU Art Museum and U Bring Change 2 Mind have invited IU students to participate in an art project that aims to illuminate the challenges, hopes, and fears of our campus community through a month-long display of artworks, poems, and prose.

Exhibits

15 Sunday / February 15, 2015

Sunday Assembly: Live Better, Help Often, Wonder More

01:00 pm to 02:00 pm
Monroe County Public Library Rm 1B
https://www.facebook.com/events/363028057200231/

A global godless congregation that celebrates this one life we know we have.

Theme: Evolution: Our species, ourselves

Speaker: Tom Schoenemann from Indiana University Department of Anthropology.

Monroe County Public Library Rm 1B

1:00 – 2:00 pm

https://www.facebook.com/events/363028057200231/

Children / Education / Speakers

15 Sunday / February 15, 2015

This May Be the Last Time

03:00 pm to 04:30 pm
IU Cinema 1213 East 7th Street, Bloomington, IN 47406
http://www.cinema.indiana.edu/?post_type=film&p=8198

This May Be the Last Time is a personal documentary from Sterlin Harjo about Muscogee (Creek) hymns, which explores their connection to such diverse materials as Scottish folk music, gospel hymns, and rock music. The hymns were sung during the mysterious disappearance of his grandfather in 1962, and they are still sung today to sustain Native people in times of sadness and rejuvenation. Harjo’s films are screened at festivals around the world, including the Berlin International Film Festival, the Native American Film + Video Festival, and the Sundance Film Festival. (HD. 90 min. Not Rated.)

Films

15 Sunday / February 15, 2015

Jacob Latham @ The Acoustic Graveyard’s Grand Opening Bash!

06:00 pm to 09:30 pm
The Acoustic Graveyard, 1731 K Street, Bedford, IN
https://www.facebook.com/events/914816158551687/

Launching our mission for an Acoustic Music Revival in #Bedford #Indiana!
https://www.facebook.com/TheAcousticGraveyard

MUSICIAN LINE-UP:
—————————-
• Jacob Latham: Bloomington-based Neo-Folk sing-songwriter/multi-instrumentalist.

• Lacey Chaddock: Bloomington-based singer/songwriter, with hints of the great Joe Jackson in her work.

• Joseph Strunk: Bedford-based singer/songwriter and flat-picker, in the tradition of Woody Guthrie and Hank Williams

• Jesse Streich & Bill Shirley: A tight acoustic duo. A guitar god. And a soulful singer. It doesn’t get sweeter than that.

• Yer hosts, Kimmie & Johnny, Bedford-based Country Punk band. We steal from everybody!

——————
What is the Acoustic Graveyard?

• A micro-venue presenting the finest in acoustic & low-volume LIVE music in a relaxed, living-room-like setting. AMAZING acoustics….

• A low-cost way to experience music & musicians person to person. Without the interference of technology. Or sound professionals. Or AutoTune….

• A regular gathering of musicians and music lovers.

• A community.

•A cause….

• One helluva 3-hour, family-friendly, potluck, BYOB, love fest……

• A heartfelt homage to Bloomington, Indiana’s Swtichyard (https://www.facebook.com/TheSwitchyard), set in peaceful, picturesque Bedford, Indiana…. Halfway between Indianapolis, IN and Louisville, KY…..

The first Sunday of every month musicians and music lovers come together at the Acoustic Graveyard to talk, laugh, love, and hear great live music.

Whether you’re a touring professional, singer/songwriter, campfire picker, or audience singalong champ, if you love music, you just found the new home of your Best Time…..

Think MTV Unplugged. With you sharing a couch and some hummus with Kurt Cobain, instead of swearing at your lousy computer speakers….

Each event night, expect to hear 3 to 4 professionals let their hair down with their favorite acoustic axe for tight half-hour sets.

And what makes the night really special, hear up to 5 local, unbooked nonprofessional musicians share a favorite song as they take their step toward becoming Rising Stars.

AND THEN THERE’S THE AUDIENCE JAM where you get to sing and/or play along with everyone in the house on a classic we all know!

Throw in a detailed PLAY BILL, with bios and pictures of the featured musicians, and it’s a musical experience YouTube just can’t compete with.

And you’ll NEVER FORGET!

Eat and Drink / Entertainment / Live Music

15 Sunday / February 15, 2015

Credenza

06:30 pm to 07:55 pm
IU Cinema 1213 East 7th Street, Bloomington, IN 47406
http://www.cinema.indiana.edu/?post_type=film&p=8214

The dramatic meets the absurd in this modern day “Christmas tale for adults” set in the western Ukrainian city of Lviv. Orest is a professional cellist trying to maintain his dignity while navigating the pitfalls of contemporary Ukrainian life. Faced with bribery, jealousy, and familial conflicts, he is brought to the brink of despair when his own family becomes a tragicomic battlefield of Soviet and post-Soviet mentalities. (2K DCP presentation)

The film Credenza has replaced Haytarma in the program.

Films

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