Events

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In a series of conversations that bring guest artists to campus to discuss what they face in making art in the modern world, Pulitzer Prize-winning poet and director of the Princeton Atelier Paul Muldoon moderates a discussion with Kyle Marshall, artistic director of Kyle Marshall Choreography and winner of a 2018 New York Dance and Performance “Bessie” Award, and Lorrie Moore, fiction writer and recipient of the Rome Prize and the Berlin Prize.

 

Tickets & Details

This event is free and open to the public; advance tickets required. Reserve tickets through University Ticketing

Directions

Get directions to Richardson Auditorium, located in Alexander Hall on the Princeton University campus.

Accessibility

symbol for wheelchair accessibilityRichardson Auditorium is an accessible venue. Guests in need of access accommodations are invited to contact the Lewis Center at 609-258-5262 or email LewisCenter@princeton.edu at least one week in advance of the event date.

About Kyle Marshall

Choreographer Kyle Marshall dances alone on a stage lit with blue light

Tony Turner Photographer, MUA + Costume by Edo Tastic

Kyle Marshall is a choreographer, performer, teacher and artistic director of Kyle Marshall Choreography (KMC), a dance company that sees the dancing body as a container of history, an igniter of social reform and a site of celebration. Since inception in 2014, KMC has performed at venues including Chelsea Factory, BAM Next Wave Festival, Jacob’s Pillow Inside/Out, Actors Fund Arts Center, New Jersey Performing Arts Center, Little Island, and Roulette. Kyle has received choreographic and dance film commissions from the Baryshnikov Arts Center, “Dance on the Lawn,” Montclair’s Dance Festival, Harlem Stage and The Shed.

 

 

About Lorrie Moore

Lorrie Moore stands in a doorway, smiling and wearing a black sweater.

Photo © Basso CANNARSA/Opale

Lorrie Moore is the author of four novels and four short story collections. She has also written cultural criticism for The New York Review of Books, The New Yorker, and other publications. A recipient of the Rome Prize and the Berlin Prize, she is currently the Gertrude Conaway Vanderbilt Professor of English and Creative Writing at Vanderbilt University.

 

Presented By

  • Princeton Atelier

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