Is it magic or is it science? Have great fun exploring the surprising tricks mirrors can play on your brain! This special hands-on exhibition for people of all ages is on display at WonderLab (Tuesday – Sunday) through April 13.
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13 Sunday / April 13, 2014
Mirror Mysteries: Science of Reflection
308 W. Fourth Street Bloomington, Indiana 47404
http://www.wonderlab.org
13 Sunday / April 13, 2014
Exhibits at Mathers Museum
Mathers Museum, 416 N. Indiana Ave.
http://mathers.indiana.edu
Thoughts, Things, and Theories…What Is Culture?
“Thoughts, Things, and Theories…What Is Culture?” examines the nature of culture through the exploration of cultural traditions surrounding life stages and universal needs. Runs through May 9, 2014.
Assessing Authenticity: Museum Fakes and Mistakes
This exhibit explores issues surrounding object identification and authentication within museums. Runs through May 9, 2014.
From the Big Bang to the World Wide Web: The Origins of Everything
This exhibit examines history on a large scale, through the exploration of cosmic, biological, and human origins. Runs through May 9, 2014.
Ojibwe Public Art, Ostrom Private Lives
“Ojibwe Public Art, Ostrom Private Lives” explores works by late 20th century Ojibwe artists of Manitoulin Island, Canada, collected by Elinor and Vincent Ostrom. The exhibit was curated by a team of IU graduate students through a project partially supported by the IU College of Arts and Sciences Ostrom Grants Program. Runs through May 9, 2014.
Rhythms of the World Audio Exhibit
Rhythms of the World is a free audioguide tour of musical instruments from around the globe featured in exhibits throughout the museum. The audioguide includes narration and musical clips of the highlighted instruments. Runs through May 9, 2014.
Mather Museum Hours: Tues. – Fri., 9 am – 4:30 pm; Sat. & Sun., 1 – 4:30 pm
13 Sunday / April 13, 2014
Wildflower Identification Workshop
09:00 am
Army Corps of Engineers Office, 1620 E. Monroe Dam Court
http://www.tinyurl.com/monroelake
FREE but registration is REQUIRED by April 10; limited to 20 people. Sign up by emailing [email protected] with your name, phone number, and number of people in your group (or call the Paynetown Activity Center at 812-837-9967).
This workshop is for people with a strong interest in learning how to identify wildflowers using a key. The focus will be on understanding terms and techniques, so that you can use your skills to identify a wide variety of wildflowers throughout the seasons. The first portion of the workshop will be held inside; the second portion will be outside, practicing hands-on identification (so please bring appropriate outerwear). Recommended for ages 16 and up. 3 hours
13 Sunday / April 13, 2014
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.
Focalpoint: Personal Objects: Art from Eastern and Southern Africa
January 14–May 11, 2014 Raymond and Laura Wielgus Gallery of the Arts of Africa, the South Pacific, and the Americas, Focalpoint, third floor From jewelry and headdresses to household objects such as containers, headrests, and spoons, the art of eastern and southern Africa for the most part is intimately connected with the individual. Though these regions of Africa do not have the large numbers of masks and figural sculpture for which western and central Africa are known, the personal objects found there frequently reflect the deep cultural significances and attention to form and detail seen elsewhere on the continent. This installation has been organized to coincide with the A352/A552, Art of Eastern and Southern Africa, a course being taught during the spring 2014 semester in the Department of the History of Art.
New in the Galleries: ‘Max Beckmann’s Woodcuts’
Gallery of the Art of the Western World, Doris Steinmetz Kellett Endowed Gallery of Twentieth-Century Art, first floor
February 4–June 22, 2014
Although the German Expressionist artist Max Beckmann was a prolific graphic artist (producing 374 prints during his lifetime), he created fewer than 20 woodcuts. Most were produced during the 1920s, when Germany was experiencing a revival of interest in the medium. Seven prints from this period will be featured in this installation.
Special Exhibition: Matisse’s Jazz and Other Works from Indiana University Collections
April 2–May 25, 2014
Special Exhibitions Gallery, first floor
In addition to highlighting the IU Art Museum’s rare complete suite of twenty color stencil prints from Jazz—Matisse’s last and greatest book project—this exhibition will include more than thirty other works by this modern master from the holdings of the Art Museum and Lilly Library. Special attention will be paid to the artist’s works on paper and book illustrations from the 1920s through the end of his career.
Special Exhibition: Francesco Solimena: Picturing the World for an Eighteenth-Century Royal Wedding
April 2–May 25, 2014
Judi and Milt Stewart Hexagon Gallery, first floor
Through a selection of pieces coming from the Getty Research Institute, the IU Fine Arts Library, the Lilly Library, and the IU Art Museum collection, this exhibition focuses on one of the IU Art Museum’s masterpieces, Francesco Solimena’s Allegory of the Four Parts of the World, highlighting the painting’s history, patronage, and iconography. This exhibition features a thirteen-minute documentary, The World around Solimena.
Special Exhibitions: Giving Back to Africa: Beta Histoire
April 1–30, 2014
Thomas T. Solley Atrium, second floor
Children in the Democratic Republic of Congo tell stories to each other every night. These stories often have a moral lesson or try to explain something in the world. The storytelling always begins with a child raising his/her hand and saying, “Beta Histoire,” or “I want to tell a story.” Experience the stories told in this exhibition of photographs by students in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Special Exhibition: Master of Fine Arts Thesis Exhibitions
April 2–May 11, 2014
Special Exhibitions Gallery, first floor
At 6:30 p.m. during the opening receptions, each exhibitor will give a brief talk about his or her work in the Thomas T. Solley Atrium, first floor.
April 2‒13
Stephen Crimarco, Photography
Alysha Kupferer, Textiles (in Thomas T. Solley Atrium, second floor)
Christina Weaver, Painting
Opening Reception: Friday, April 4, 6:00‒8:00 p.m.
13 Sunday / April 13, 2014
Brown County Art Guild – Spring Exhibition
12:00 pm to 05:00 pm
The Brown County Art Guild, 48 Van Buren Street, Nashville
http://browncountyartguild.org
Now on display in the Upper Loft Gallery through April 30: A selection of spring paintings from the Marie Goth Estate Collection. Also on display: Brown County Art Guild’s Member Artists Spring Exhibit; two floors of all new artwork by 45 of the Midwest’s finest artists! Reception: Second Saturday, April, 12, 5-8 pm during the Village Art Walk. Hours: Tuesday– Sat: 11:00 am – 5:00 pm, Sunday: 12:00 – 5:00 pm (Closed Mondays).
13 Sunday / April 13, 2014
Exhibit: ‘Mirror Mysteries: Science of Reflection’ at WonderLab
01:00 pm
WonderLab Museum of Science, Health and Technology (308 W. 4th St.)
http://www.wonderlab.org
Is it magic or is it science? Have great fun exploring the surprising tricks mirrors can play on your brain! This special hands-on exhibition for people of all ages is on display at WonderLab (Tuesday – Sunday) through April 13.
Museum hours:
Tuesday-Saturday: 9:30 am – 5:00 pm
Sunday: 1:00 pm – 5:00 pm
13 Sunday / April 13, 2014
Bloomington Battle Games Club – Battle at Bryan Park
01:00 pm
Bryan Park (near shelter above basketball courts)
https://www.facebook.com/groups/59885346244/
The Bloomington Battle Games Club, a chapter of the national foam-fighting organization Belegarth, meets every Sunday at Bryan Park (weather permitting) to fight. Medieval and fantasy – inspired combat is re-enacted using foam weapons of several varieties. Multiple styles of gameplay are practiced, including team-based and free-for-all. Visit the Facebook page for further information.
13 Sunday / April 13, 2014
Bloomington Chamber Singers presents James Whitbourn: Annelies (2009)
03:00 pm
The Warehouse, 1525 S. Rogers St.
http://www.chambersingers.info
Bloomington Chamber Singers presents the regional premiere of James Whitbourn’s Annelies on Saturday, April 12 at 7:30 PM, and Sunday, April 13 at 3:00 PM, in a site-specific performance at The Warehouse, 1525 S. Rogers Street, Bloomington. Gerald Sousa, now in his 25th year as Artistic Director of the Chamber Singers, will conduct the sixty-voice choral ensemble, soprano soloist, and instrumentalists.
The choral memories and reflections of Annelies are inspired by the diary of Anne Frank. Whitbourn uses Anne’s remarkable and penetrating observations to set a series of vignettes, beginning with the Frank family’s plan to go into hiding and ending with their capture and transfer to the concentration camp. Originally premiering as a work for chorus and large orchestra, Whitbourn has since prepared an additional scoring of the piece as chamber music, replacing the orchestra with a quartet of violin, clarinet, cello, and piano. In its recast form the work takes on a plaintive, transparent, and vulnerable quality, poignantly reflecting the isolation and inner struggles of the family in self-imposed captivity. Each scene in this production will be illuminated by large-screen projections drawn from archives of the period, to inspire profound reflections on issues that are universal and painfully relevant in our time.
Tickets are $20 general admission and $10 for students with a valid ID, and may be purchased at the door or in advance from choir members or through the BCT Box Office, 114 E. Kirkwood Ave. (www.buskirkchumley.org 812-323-3020). For additional information, including a press packet please visit: www.chambersingers.info.
13 Sunday / April 13, 2014
IU Cinema: “Vic + Flo Saw a Bear” film
03:00 pm to 04:35 pm
IU Cinema, 1213 E. 7th St.
http://www.cinema.indiana.edu/?post_type=film&p=6176
Vic is a parolee who retreats to her ailing uncle’s shack in the woods in Quebec, joined by current love interest and fellow ex-con Flo. Their attempt to live a peaceful life in the woods is constantly interrupted by various people, including a parole officer and intrusive neighbor. Eventually, these pesky people create major problems for the couple. The film’s mix of drama, noir, and dark humor defies easy categorization. Quirky characters whose motives are obscure constantly weave in and out of the story, but as the plot unfolds, a nasty underlying truth emerges. Winner of the Silver Bear at the 2013 Berlin Film Festival. In French language with English subtitles. (2K DCP presentation)
13 Sunday / April 13, 2014
Jazz Jam
05:00 pm to 07:30 pm
Players Pub, 424 S. Walnut
http://www.theplayerspub.com/calendar.php
Jazz Jam