if (!window.AdButler){(function(){var s = document.createElement(“script”); s.async = true; s.type = “text/javascript”;s.src = ‘http://ab169825.adbutler-ikon.com/app.js’;var n = document.getElementsByTagName(“script”)[0]; n.parentNode.insertBefore(s, n);}());}

var AdButler = AdButler || {}; AdButler.ads = AdButler.ads || [];
var abkw = window.abkw || ”;
var plc278489 = window.plc278489 || 0;
document.write(‘‘);
AdButler.ads.push({handler: function(opt){ AdButler.register(169825, 278489, [650,211], ‘placement_278489_’+opt.place, opt); }, opt: { place: plc278489++, keywords: abkw, domain: ‘ab169825.adbutler-ikon.com’, click:’CLICK_MACRO_PLACEHOLDER’ }});

25 Sunday / November 25, 2012

Exhibit: ‘Maiolica, Not Majolica’ at the Farmer House Museum

10:00 am to 02:00 pm
Farmer House Museum (529 North College Avenue)
http://bloomington.in.gov/locations/viewLocation.php?location_id=250

Seven Bloomington maiolica artists are showing work at the Farmer House Museum from Oct. 5 to Dec. 6, 2012. They are leExposition Universelle. Susan Snyder, who learned the tradition and art of maiolica in Faenza, Italy from traditional artisans, and began to share her knowledge with ceramic artists in Bloomington upon her return, by way of England, in the 1990s. “Majolica”, spelled with a “j”, is the word for a 19 century English and French style, that has little to do with the Italian style, except for the use of metal-based glazes. Snyder practices and teaches the original craft of maiolica, which began in Italy in the 1400s. It is a folk style, in which linear designs are painted in bright colors on plates, bowls and other vessels.

Hours are 10 am -1 pm Wednesday-Friday, 10 am – 4 pm Saturday, 10 am – 2 pm Sunday

Exhibits

25 Sunday / November 25, 2012

Exhibit: ‘Intimate Models: Photographs of Husbands, Wives, and Lovers’

12:00 pm to 05:00 pm
IU Art Museum (IU Campus, 1133 E. 7th St.)
http://tinyurl.com/9jrmkox

This installation, running from September 11 to December 31, will focus on three photographers Julia Margaret Cameron, Edward Weston, and Harry Callahan, who used their romantic partners as their subjects. Whether portraits or nude studies, these images reveal a sensitivity that comes from the artists and sitters’ close personal relationships.

This installation is presented in conjunction it the special exhibition “A Place Aside: Artists and their Partners,” on view at the Kinsey Institute Gallery, September 28–December 20.

Exhibits

25 Sunday / November 25, 2012

Exhibit: ‘French Printmaking in the Seventeenth Century’

12:00 pm to 05:00 pm
IU Art Museum (IU Campus, 1133 E. 7th St.)
http://tinyurl.com/9jrmkox

Artists working in Paris and Lorraine during the Baroque period developed distinctive styles—which focused on the vibrancy of the line—that differed markedly from their Italian and Dutch contemporaries. The two print kiosks in the early part of the gallery feature French works by Jacques Bellange, Claude Lorrain, Jacques Callot, and Claude Mellan, whose engraving is a tour de force of printmaking that creates the face of Christ using a single line.

Exhibits

25 Sunday / November 25, 2012

Exhibit: Joe Tilson and the News of the World

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

Gallery of the Art of the Western World, Doris Steinmetz Kellett Gallery of Twentieth-Century Art, first floor. The British Pop artist Joe Tilson used tabloid journalism and news photography as the basis for many of his prints and multiples of the late 1960s. Becoming increasingly political, he saw the pictures of revolutionary leaders and current events as a means for social commentary. This installation will include several of his works from this turbulent period.

Runs until December 30. Open during regular museum hours (Tuesday – Saturday, 10 am – 5 pm, Sunday 12 pm – 5 pm.)

Exhibits

25 Sunday / November 25, 2012

Santa at College Mall

12:00 pm to 06:00 pm on Nov 18
College Mall
http://www.simon.com/mall/college-mall

Santa Claus will be appearing at the Macy’s Court area of the College Mall from November 17 through December 24. Kids are invited to come meet and greet Santa and pose for photos. Many holiday specials will also be available from retailers. Visit website to see all mall hours, including special holiday hours.

Children / Entertainment

25 Sunday / November 25, 2012

Exhibit: The Day in Its Color: A Hoosier Photographer’s Journey through Midcentury America

01:00 pm to 04:30 pm
Mathers Museum of World Cultures (416 N. Indiana Avenue)
http://www.mathers.indiana.edu

This exhibit at the Mathers Museum of World Cultures is a companion piece to the book by Eric Sandweiss, and presents a survey of Cushman’s extraordinary work, an archive of photographs that is the largest known body of early color photographs by a single photographer—14,500 in all, most shot on vivid, color-saturated Kodachrome stock. It will run until December 21.

Mathers Museum hours are:
Tuesday-Friday: 9 am-4:30 pm
Saturday-Sunday: 1-4:30 pm

Exhibits

25 Sunday / November 25, 2012

‘Almost, Maine’

02:00 pm to 03:30 pm
Brown County Playhouse, 70 S. Van Buren St., Nashville, IN 47448
http://www.browncountyplayhouse.org

A series of vignettes show us a picture of love that we might not might not immediately recognize. All of the scenes in this pretty play take place at the same time in the same small town, and through the use of Magical Realism we see ten stories of love that are honest, hilarious, and, at times, sad. This play can warm the heart and send you out believing in love and hope and magic all bundled against the winter cold.

Theater

25 Sunday / November 25, 2012

Ami Saraiya and The Outcome with Nathaniel Seer and An Argot at The Bishop

08:00 pm
The Bishop (123 S. Walnut St.)
http://www.thebishopbar.com

Ami Saraiya of Chicago will perform at The Bishop, accompanied by Nathaniel Seer and An Argot of Bloomington.

“Imagine things you like about The Do, Coco Rosie, and Mark Berube (and, for entrenched aficianados of quirky folk, The McGarrigle Sisters). Inject a few teaspoons of Spirit and a hint of Sgt. Pepper-era Beatle-delia. You still wouldn’t have a handle on Saraiya’s idiosyncratic sonic art. I guess you just have to experience it.” – Mary Leary, My Old Kentucky Blog

Entertainment / Live Music

Submit Your Event

Pin It on Pinterest