Fall 2021 Painting Class Show
The Program in Visual Arts presents new work by students in "First Year Painting Studio Seminar" and introductory painting courses led by Colleen Asper and Pam Lins. FREE; open to Princeton students, faculty and staff.
The Program in Visual Arts presents new work by students in "First Year Painting Studio Seminar" and introductory painting courses led by Colleen Asper and Pam Lins. FREE; open to Princeton students, faculty and staff.
The Program in Visual Arts presents new work by students in “Fabric Logic" taught by MJ Daines and "Collage: Diversions, Contradictions, and Anomalies" taught by Troy Michie. FREE; gallery open daily to Princeton students, faculty and staff.
In the final class presentation from a Princeton Atelier course, hear music from award-winning composer Georgia Stitt, performed by members of the Princeton Playhouse Choir, as well as original student work created to illuminate the ideas of “The Circling Universe.” FREE tickets required; open to University community.
This event has been rescheduled to March 2022. Join Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Paul Muldoon as he delivers a sharp wake-up call reading from his fourteenth collection, "Howdie-Skelp: Poems" at Labyrinth Books. FREE and open to public. Registration required for attendance in-person at the bookstore or via livestream.
The Program in Visual Arts presents new work by students in "First Year Painting Studio Seminar" and introductory painting courses led by Colleen Asper and Pam Lins. FREE; open to Princeton students, faculty and staff.
The Program in Visual Arts presents new work by students in “Fabric Logic" taught by MJ Daines and "Collage: Diversions, Contradictions, and Anomalies" taught by Troy Michie. FREE; gallery open daily to Princeton students, faculty and staff.
On Dec. 2, 6 + 10, watch end of semester showings of dance works and new student choreography created during fall 2021 dance courses, including showings from courses in ballet, rhythm tap, contemporary dance, choreography workshops, and "The American Experience and Dance Practices of the African Diaspora." FREE; open to University community.
The first showing of scenes since its premiere production in 1980, "Evelyn Brown: A Diary"by María Irene Fornés, stages and refracts the words of a domestic worker in New England in 1909.
FREE; tickets required. Open to students, faculty + staff.
NOTE: The workshop on December 16 has been canceled. Professional director and choreographer and Princeton Arts Fellow Will Davis embarks on a new project including workshop sessions for students to join in the studio and participate in developing aspects of the show. Conversations follow with Davis and guest designers; food provided. Open to Princeton students only.
L’Avant-Scène presents FRAGMENTS XXI, by FRE-THR 211 Students, directed by Florent Masse. For Princeton students, faculty + staff only. FREE; registration required.
The first showing of scenes since its premiere production in 1980, "Evelyn Brown: A Diary"by María Irene Fornés, stages and refracts the words of a domestic worker in New England in 1909.
FREE; tickets required. Open to students, faculty + staff.
The Program in Visual Arts presents new work by students in "First Year Painting Studio Seminar" and introductory painting courses led by Colleen Asper and Pam Lins. FREE; open to Princeton students, faculty and staff.
The Program in Visual Arts presents new work by students in “Fabric Logic" taught by MJ Daines and "Collage: Diversions, Contradictions, and Anomalies" taught by Troy Michie. FREE; gallery open daily to Princeton students, faculty and staff.
Cian T. McMahon, Associate Professor in the Department of History and Honors College at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, lectures on “The Coffin Ship: Life and Death at Sea during the Great Famine” with introduction by Paul Muldoon. FREE and open to the public. Register and join via Zoom Webinar. Live closed captions available.
The Program in Visual Arts presents new work by students in "First Year Painting Studio Seminar" and introductory painting courses led by Colleen Asper and Pam Lins. FREE; open to Princeton students, faculty and staff.