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Sunday, September 1, 2019
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10:30 AM
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10:30 AM
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1:30 PM
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6:30 PM - 8:00 PM
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Monday, September 2, 2019
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6:30 AM - 7:00 AM
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(All Day)
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4:30 PM - 5:30 PM
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6:00 PM - 6:30 PM
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6:30 PM - 7:00 PM
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7:00 PM - 7:30 PM
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Tuesday, September 3, 2019
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11:00 AM - Noon
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11:30 AM - 12:30 PM
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1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
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Art Exhibit: Props: Personal Identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts, Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Props:
Personal identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts
The
term “props” brings to mind the objects used in the theater that help establish
the meaning of a scene. In this theater context, the word is shortened from
“properties,” things collectively owned by a theater group. But could the term
also reflect the notion that props show “properties” of a character, offering
layers of information and meaning to a viewer.? “Props” is also a slang term,
meaning “proper respect.” In this show, we analyze the props in photographic
portraits taken by RSR between 1920-1936 to see the way that the “props”—most
often objects chosen by the sitters themselves—tell us something about the
self-identity of the sitters. The objects chosen often underscore the proper
respect due the sitters based on their attainments, but also can give
insights—in an otherwise very formulaic genre—into the inner desires and
predilections of the sitters. Props thus can help us see beyond the surface,
or, perhaps conversely, can reify socially-agreed upon tropes.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (lower level)
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Southern Gothic: Literary Intersections w/Art from the Johnson Collection, Richardson Family Art Museum (upper level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
From the haunting novels of William
Faulkner to the gritty short stories of Flannery O'Connor, the Southern Gothic
literary tradition has exhumed and examined the American South’s unique
mystery, contradictions, and dark humor. Beginning in the mid-nineteenth
century, American writers, epitomized by Edgar Allan Poe and Nathaniel
Hawthorne, sought to reinterpret the Gothic imagination of their European
counterparts, dramatizing the cultures and characters of a region in the midst
of civil war and its tumultuous aftermath. Decades later, a new generation of
authors—including Tennessee Williams, Carson McCullers, and Toni Morrison—wove
Gothic elements into their own narratives, exploring the complexities of a changing
social terrain and the ancient spirits that linger in its corners.
With works drawn exclusively from the
Johnson Collection, Southern Gothic illuminates how nineteenth- and
twentieth-century artists employed a potent visual language to transcribe the
tensions between the South’s idyllic aura and its historical realities. Often
described as a mood or sensibility rather than a strict set of thematic or
technical conventions, features of the Southern Gothic can include horror,
romance, and the supernatural. While academic painters such as Charles Fraser
and Thomas Noble conveyed the genre’s gloomy tonalities in their canvases,
Aaron Douglas and Harry Hoffman grappled with the injustices of a modern world.
Other artists, including Alexander Brook and Eugene Thomason, investigated
prevailing stereotypes of rural Southerners—a trope often accentuated in
Southern Gothic literature. Collectively, these images demonstrate that
definitions of the Gothic are neither monolithic nor momentary, inviting us,
instead to contemplate how the Southern Gothic legacy continues to inform our
understanding of the American South.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (upper level) Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday - 1 - 5 p.m. Thursday - 1 - 9 p.m. Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (Upper Level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
4:30 PM - 5:00 PM
|
|
5:00 PM - 5:30 PM
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|
5:30 PM - 6:00 PM
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5:30 PM - 7:00 PM
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6:00 PM - 6:30 PM
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6:00 PM - 7:00 PM
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Wofford Theatre Open House and Auditions, Sallenger Sisters Black Box Theatre (RSRCA)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Interested in getting involved in the Theatre Department at Wofford? Want to learn more about what’s coming up this season, and about how you can help? Please join us for an Open House on Sept. 3 at 6 PM in the Sallenger Sisters Black Box Theatre! Meet the faculty, staff, and students who make up the vibrant and growing theatre community on campus, learn more about opportunities to get involved both onstage and off, and enjoy some delicious treats while you’re at it! After the Open House, all are welcome to stay to audition for our fall play, Circle Mirror Transformation, written by Annie Baker and directed by Prof. Dan Day. Auditions will include cold readings from the script, and all auditionees are also invited to prepare and memorize two contrasting, contemporary monologues from American playwrights, no more than one minute long each. Note that monologues are required for all students who are currently pursuing or who plan to declare a major or minor in Theatre; please prepare new material that you have not used for previous auditions, classes, or productions at Wofford. Monologues are optional for all others.
|
Location: |
Sallenger Sisters Black Box Theatre (RSRCA) |
Contact: |
Miriam Thomas
|
|
Wednesday, September 4, 2019
|
6:30 AM - 7:00 AM
|
|
12:10 PM - 1:00 PM
|
|
1:00 PM - 3:00 PM
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CREATE, Lobby of Campus Life Building
(Student Life)
|
Description: |
Create is a Wellness Center sponsored time of relaxation and creative expression during the middle of the week. We will have various projects which will be announced on our social media sites and in daily announcements. Most weeks we will meet from 1-3 in the Campus Life lobby, but every now and then we will move Create to collaborate with another group on campus such as WAC or residence life.
|
Location: |
Lobby of Campus Life Building |
Contact: |
Lisa Lefebvre
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Props: Personal Identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts, Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Props:
Personal identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts
The
term “props” brings to mind the objects used in the theater that help establish
the meaning of a scene. In this theater context, the word is shortened from
“properties,” things collectively owned by a theater group. But could the term
also reflect the notion that props show “properties” of a character, offering
layers of information and meaning to a viewer.? “Props” is also a slang term,
meaning “proper respect.” In this show, we analyze the props in photographic
portraits taken by RSR between 1920-1936 to see the way that the “props”—most
often objects chosen by the sitters themselves—tell us something about the
self-identity of the sitters. The objects chosen often underscore the proper
respect due the sitters based on their attainments, but also can give
insights—in an otherwise very formulaic genre—into the inner desires and
predilections of the sitters. Props thus can help us see beyond the surface,
or, perhaps conversely, can reify socially-agreed upon tropes.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (lower level)
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Southern Gothic: Literary Intersection with Art from the Johnson Collection, Richardson Family Art Museum (upper level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
From the haunting novels of William
Faulkner to the gritty short stories of Flannery O'Connor, the Southern Gothic
literary tradition has exhumed and examined the American South’s unique
mystery, contradictions, and dark humor. Beginning in the mid-nineteenth
century, American writers, epitomized by Edgar Allan Poe and Nathaniel
Hawthorne, sought to reinterpret the Gothic imagination of their European
counterparts, dramatizing the cultures and characters of a region in the midst
of civil war and its tumultuous aftermath. Decades later, a new generation of
authors—including Tennessee Williams, Carson McCullers, and Toni Morrison—wove
Gothic elements into their own narratives, exploring the complexities of a changing
social terrain and the ancient spirits that linger in its corners.
With works drawn exclusively from the
Johnson Collection, Southern Gothic illuminates how nineteenth- and
twentieth-century artists employed a potent visual language to transcribe the
tensions between the South’s idyllic aura and its historical realities. Often
described as a mood or sensibility rather than a strict set of thematic or
technical conventions, features of the Southern Gothic can include horror,
romance, and the supernatural. While academic painters such as Charles Fraser
and Thomas Noble conveyed the genre’s gloomy tonalities in their canvases,
Aaron Douglas and Harry Hoffman grappled with the injustices of a modern world.
Other artists, including Alexander Brook and Eugene Thomason, investigated
prevailing stereotypes of rural Southerners—a trope often accentuated in
Southern Gothic literature. Collectively, these images demonstrate that
definitions of the Gothic are neither monolithic nor momentary, inviting us,
instead to contemplate how the Southern Gothic legacy continues to inform our
understanding of the American South.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (upper level) Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 - 5 p.m. Thursday: 1 - 9 p.m. Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (Upper Level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
4:30 PM - 5:30 PM
|
|
5:15 PM - 6:15 PM
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|
6:00 PM - 6:30 PM
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|
6:30 PM - 7:00 PM
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|
7:00 PM - 7:30 PM
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|
Thursday, September 5, 2019
|
11:00 AM - Noon
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|
11:30 AM - 12:30 PM
|
|
Noon - 1:00 PM
|
Advising Students Requesting a Catalog Update, Gray-Jones Room
(Academic)
|
Description: |
Please join Jennifer Allison and Carol Wilson for a lunch presentation & discussion, reviewing important information for advising students who request a Catalog update to change their options for meeting general education requirements, The meeting is useful for major advisors as well as general education advisors working with second-year students. All advisors are welcome.
|
Location: |
Gray-Jones Room |
Contact: |
Carol Wilson
|
|
1:00 PM - 9:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Props: Personal Identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts, Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Props:
Personal identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts
The
term “props” brings to mind the objects used in the theater that help establish
the meaning of a scene. In this theater context, the word is shortened from
“properties,” things collectively owned by a theater group. But could the term
also reflect the notion that props show “properties” of a character, offering
layers of information and meaning to a viewer.? “Props” is also a slang term,
meaning “proper respect.” In this show, we analyze the props in photographic
portraits taken by RSR between 1920-1936 to see the way that the “props”—most
often objects chosen by the sitters themselves—tell us something about the
self-identity of the sitters. The objects chosen often underscore the proper
respect due the sitters based on their attainments, but also can give
insights—in an otherwise very formulaic genre—into the inner desires and
predilections of the sitters. Props thus can help us see beyond the surface,
or, perhaps conversely, can reify socially-agreed upon tropes.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (lower level)
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 9:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Southern Gothic: Literary Intersection with Art from the Johnson Collection, Richardson Family Art Museum (upper level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
From the haunting novels of William
Faulkner to the gritty short stories of Flannery O'Connor, the Southern Gothic
literary tradition has exhumed and examined the American South’s unique
mystery, contradictions, and dark humor. Beginning in the mid-nineteenth
century, American writers, epitomized by Edgar Allan Poe and Nathaniel
Hawthorne, sought to reinterpret the Gothic imagination of their European
counterparts, dramatizing the cultures and characters of a region in the midst
of civil war and its tumultuous aftermath. Decades later, a new generation of
authors—including Tennessee Williams, Carson McCullers, and Toni Morrison—wove
Gothic elements into their own narratives, exploring the complexities of a changing
social terrain and the ancient spirits that linger in its corners.
With works drawn exclusively from the
Johnson Collection, Southern Gothic illuminates how nineteenth- and
twentieth-century artists employed a potent visual language to transcribe the
tensions between the South’s idyllic aura and its historical realities. Often
described as a mood or sensibility rather than a strict set of thematic or
technical conventions, features of the Southern Gothic can include horror,
romance, and the supernatural. While academic painters such as Charles Fraser
and Thomas Noble conveyed the genre’s gloomy tonalities in their canvases,
Aaron Douglas and Harry Hoffman grappled with the injustices of a modern world.
Other artists, including Alexander Brook and Eugene Thomason, investigated
prevailing stereotypes of rural Southerners—a trope often accentuated in
Southern Gothic literature. Collectively, these images demonstrate that
definitions of the Gothic are neither monolithic nor momentary, inviting us,
instead to contemplate how the Southern Gothic legacy continues to inform our
understanding of the American South.
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (Upper Level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
4:30 PM - 5:00 PM
|
|
5:00 PM - 5:30 PM
|
|
5:30 PM - 6:00 PM
|
|
6:00 PM - 6:30 PM
|
|
6:30 PM - 10:00 PM
|
Wofford's Back-to-School Bash, Fr8 Yard
(Student Life)
|
Description: |
This event is a back-to-school bash hosted by the senior class to kick off the year and fundraising efforts. The event will be a fun time for students from every class to reunite during the first week of school and have a good time! There will be special Wofford themed food and drinks sold as well to help the class with their fundraising goal. We hope for the event to be a time to raise up the football team as well with a section from Coach Conklin and the cheerleading team.
|
Location: |
Fr8 Yard |
Contact: |
Alec Konrad
|
|
Friday, September 6, 2019
|
(All Day)
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Props: Personal Identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts, Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Props:
Personal identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts
The
term “props” brings to mind the objects used in the theater that help establish
the meaning of a scene. In this theater context, the word is shortened from
“properties,” things collectively owned by a theater group. But could the term
also reflect the notion that props show “properties” of a character, offering
layers of information and meaning to a viewer.? “Props” is also a slang term,
meaning “proper respect.” In this show, we analyze the props in photographic
portraits taken by RSR between 1920-1936 to see the way that the “props”—most
often objects chosen by the sitters themselves—tell us something about the
self-identity of the sitters. The objects chosen often underscore the proper
respect due the sitters based on their attainments, but also can give
insights—in an otherwise very formulaic genre—into the inner desires and
predilections of the sitters. Props thus can help us see beyond the surface,
or, perhaps conversely, can reify socially-agreed upon tropes.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (lower level)
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
|
3:00 PM - 4:00 PM
|
|
4:00 PM - 4:30 PM
|
|
4:30 PM - 5:00 PM
|
|
5:00 PM - 5:30 PM
|
|
7:00 PM - 9:00 PM
|
|
9:00 PM - 11:55 PM
|
Finite Presents "Tie Dye & Pie" *Sponsored by CREATE*, Phase III
(Student Life)
|
Description: |
Join Finite this Friday for "Tie Dye & Pie," sponsored by CREATE! From 9 p.m. - midnight, head on over to the sand volleyball courts in Phase III of the Senior Village to make your very own tie dye shirt and/or socks! Finite will be providing plain white shirts and socks, but supplies are limited! Then, after you've tie dyed, enjoy a delicious slice of pie! Many varieties and flavors of pie will be present, so come for the tie dye, and stay for the pie! Games of all kinds will be offered as well, including volleyball, basketball and spike ball. Come hang out with us!See y'all there!
|
Location: |
Phase III |
Contact: |
Annabelle Webb
|
|
Saturday, September 7, 2019
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Props: Personal Identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts, Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Props:
Personal identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts
The
term “props” brings to mind the objects used in the theater that help establish
the meaning of a scene. In this theater context, the word is shortened from
“properties,” things collectively owned by a theater group. But could the term
also reflect the notion that props show “properties” of a character, offering
layers of information and meaning to a viewer.? “Props” is also a slang term,
meaning “proper respect.” In this show, we analyze the props in photographic
portraits taken by RSR between 1920-1936 to see the way that the “props”—most
often objects chosen by the sitters themselves—tell us something about the
self-identity of the sitters. The objects chosen often underscore the proper
respect due the sitters based on their attainments, but also can give
insights—in an otherwise very formulaic genre—into the inner desires and
predilections of the sitters. Props thus can help us see beyond the surface,
or, perhaps conversely, can reify socially-agreed upon tropes.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (lower level)
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Southern Gothic: Literary Intersection of Art from the Johnson Collection, Richardson Family Art Museum (upper level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
From the haunting novels of William
Faulkner to the gritty short stories of Flannery O'Connor, the Southern Gothic
literary tradition has exhumed and examined the American South’s unique
mystery, contradictions, and dark humor. Beginning in the mid-nineteenth
century, American writers, epitomized by Edgar Allan Poe and Nathaniel
Hawthorne, sought to reinterpret the Gothic imagination of their European
counterparts, dramatizing the cultures and characters of a region in the midst
of civil war and its tumultuous aftermath. Decades later, a new generation of
authors—including Tennessee Williams, Carson McCullers, and Toni Morrison—wove
Gothic elements into their own narratives, exploring the complexities of a changing
social terrain and the ancient spirits that linger in its corners.
With works drawn exclusively from the
Johnson Collection, Southern Gothic illuminates how nineteenth- and
twentieth-century artists employed a potent visual language to transcribe the
tensions between the South’s idyllic aura and its historical realities. Often
described as a mood or sensibility rather than a strict set of thematic or
technical conventions, features of the Southern Gothic can include horror,
romance, and the supernatural. While academic painters such as Charles Fraser
and Thomas Noble conveyed the genre’s gloomy tonalities in their canvases,
Aaron Douglas and Harry Hoffman grappled with the injustices of a modern world.
Other artists, including Alexander Brook and Eugene Thomason, investigated
prevailing stereotypes of rural Southerners—a trope often accentuated in
Southern Gothic literature. Collectively, these images demonstrate that
definitions of the Gothic are neither monolithic nor momentary, inviting us,
instead to contemplate how the Southern Gothic legacy continues to inform our
understanding of the American South.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (upper level) Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday: 1 - 5 p.m. Thursday: 1 - 9 p.m. Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (Upper Level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
Sunday, September 8, 2019
|
3:30 PM - 5:30 PM
|
|
5:00 PM - 6:30 PM
|
|
7:00 PM - 9:00 PM
|
|
Monday, September 9, 2019
|
6:30 AM - 7:00 AM
|
|
11:00 AM - 4:00 PM
|
|
Noon - 1:00 PM
|
Meet and Greet for staff, faculty and coaches, Gray-Jones Room
(Academic)
|
Description: |
The first Meet and Greet this semester is on Sep. 9. from noon till around 1pm. We will meet to network and build relationships on campus, while having a good time with a complimentary lunch. There will be two other meetings this semester on October 7 and November 4, all of them in Gray Jones room at Burwell. Come and join us!
|
Location: |
Gray-Jones in Burwell |
Contact: |
Begona Caballero
|
|
4:30 PM - 5:30 PM
|
|
6:00 PM - 6:30 PM
|
|
6:30 PM - 7:00 PM
|
|
7:00 PM - 7:30 PM
|
|
Tuesday, September 10, 2019
|
11:00 AM - Noon
|
|
11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
|
Therapy Dogs, The Pavilion
(Student Life)
|
Description: |
Indi, a therapy dog will be here from 11-12 at the Pavilion near Wightman. Please stop by for a minute to hug a dog.
|
Location: |
Pavilion |
Contact: |
Lisa Lefebvre
|
|
11:00 AM - 12:30 PM
|
|
11:30 AM - 12:30 PM
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Otherness²: Hiding in Plain Sight by Lee Ann Harrison-Houser, Richardson Family Art Gallery
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Otherness²:
Hiding in Plain Sight explores the outsider’s perspectives and the impact of
“Othering.” During the creative process, Harrison-Houser pursues authenticity
and begins to reveal untold stories in her work. However, she instinctively
hides within the mark-making with her use of symbolism, sgraffito, and
abstraction. Layer after layer of gesso and paint erase her disclosures.
Subsequently, the art installation shares these stories only in a type of
Hide-and-Seek game for the viewer. For deeper connections, the viewer
physically moves to a separate space to match the conceptual titles back to the
abstract squares. Through this physical movement and mindfulness, the
storyteller role shifts away from the artist and moves to the viewer to create
awareness, conversation, and the momentum for change.
September
10- October 12, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Gallery
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday,
Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Gallery |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Props: Personal Identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts, Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Props:
Personal identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts
The
term “props” brings to mind the objects used in the theater that help establish
the meaning of a scene. In this theater context, the word is shortened from
“properties,” things collectively owned by a theater group. But could the term
also reflect the notion that props show “properties” of a character, offering
layers of information and meaning to a viewer.? “Props” is also a slang term,
meaning “proper respect.” In this show, we analyze the props in photographic
portraits taken by RSR between 1920-1936 to see the way that the “props”—most
often objects chosen by the sitters themselves—tell us something about the
self-identity of the sitters. The objects chosen often underscore the proper
respect due the sitters based on their attainments, but also can give
insights—in an otherwise very formulaic genre—into the inner desires and
predilections of the sitters. Props thus can help us see beyond the surface,
or, perhaps conversely, can reify socially-agreed upon tropes.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (lower level)
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Southern Gothic: Literary Intersections w/Art from the Johnson Collection, Richardson Family Art Museum (upper level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
From the haunting novels of William
Faulkner to the gritty short stories of Flannery O'Connor, the Southern Gothic
literary tradition has exhumed and examined the American South’s unique
mystery, contradictions, and dark humor. Beginning in the mid-nineteenth
century, American writers, epitomized by Edgar Allan Poe and Nathaniel
Hawthorne, sought to reinterpret the Gothic imagination of their European
counterparts, dramatizing the cultures and characters of a region in the midst
of civil war and its tumultuous aftermath. Decades later, a new generation of
authors—including Tennessee Williams, Carson McCullers, and Toni Morrison—wove
Gothic elements into their own narratives, exploring the complexities of a changing
social terrain and the ancient spirits that linger in its corners.
With works drawn exclusively from the
Johnson Collection, Southern Gothic illuminates how nineteenth- and
twentieth-century artists employed a potent visual language to transcribe the
tensions between the South’s idyllic aura and its historical realities. Often
described as a mood or sensibility rather than a strict set of thematic or
technical conventions, features of the Southern Gothic can include horror,
romance, and the supernatural. While academic painters such as Charles Fraser
and Thomas Noble conveyed the genre’s gloomy tonalities in their canvases,
Aaron Douglas and Harry Hoffman grappled with the injustices of a modern world.
Other artists, including Alexander Brook and Eugene Thomason, investigated
prevailing stereotypes of rural Southerners—a trope often accentuated in
Southern Gothic literature. Collectively, these images demonstrate that
definitions of the Gothic are neither monolithic nor momentary, inviting us,
instead to contemplate how the Southern Gothic legacy continues to inform our
understanding of the American South.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (upper level) Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday - 1 - 5 p.m. Thursday - 1 - 9 p.m. Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (Upper Level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
4:30 PM - 5:00 PM
|
|
5:00 PM - 5:30 PM
|
|
5:00 PM
|
|
5:30 PM - 6:00 PM
|
|
6:00 PM - 6:30 PM
|
|
Wednesday, September 11, 2019
|
6:30 AM - 7:00 AM
|
|
7:00 AM - 10:15 AM
|
|
(All Day)
|
Dental Interim, RMSC306
(Academic)
|
Description: |
If you are interested in registering for the interim project "An Introduction to Dental Medicine, please sign the list in the Chemistry Department. Only 8 students can register and you need an override to get in. Students must have a minimum gpa of 3.2. Preference will be given to juniors and seniors. Higher gpas and making your request known earlier will help your chances of getting an override.
|
Location: |
RMSC306 |
Contact: |
Dr. Charles Bass
|
|
11:30 AM - 1:30 PM
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Otherness²: Hiding in Plain Sight by Lee Ann Harrison-Houser, Richardson Family Art Gallery
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Otherness²:
Hiding in Plain Sight explores the outsider’s perspectives and the impact of
“Othering.” During the creative process, Harrison-Houser pursues authenticity
and begins to reveal untold stories in her work. However, she instinctively
hides within the mark-making with her use of symbolism, sgraffito, and
abstraction. Layer after layer of gesso and paint erase her disclosures.
Subsequently, the art installation shares these stories only in a type of
Hide-and-Seek game for the viewer. For deeper connections, the viewer
physically moves to a separate space to match the conceptual titles back to the
abstract squares. Through this physical movement and mindfulness, the
storyteller role shifts away from the artist and moves to the viewer to create
awareness, conversation, and the momentum for change.
September
10- October 12, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Gallery
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday,
Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Gallery |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Props: Personal Identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts, Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Props:
Personal identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts
The
term “props” brings to mind the objects used in the theater that help establish
the meaning of a scene. In this theater context, the word is shortened from
“properties,” things collectively owned by a theater group. But could the term
also reflect the notion that props show “properties” of a character, offering
layers of information and meaning to a viewer.? “Props” is also a slang term,
meaning “proper respect.” In this show, we analyze the props in photographic
portraits taken by RSR between 1920-1936 to see the way that the “props”—most
often objects chosen by the sitters themselves—tell us something about the
self-identity of the sitters. The objects chosen often underscore the proper
respect due the sitters based on their attainments, but also can give
insights—in an otherwise very formulaic genre—into the inner desires and
predilections of the sitters. Props thus can help us see beyond the surface,
or, perhaps conversely, can reify socially-agreed upon tropes.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (lower level)
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Southern Gothic: Literary Intersection with Art from the Johnson Collection, Richardson Family Art Museum (upper level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
From the haunting novels of William
Faulkner to the gritty short stories of Flannery O'Connor, the Southern Gothic
literary tradition has exhumed and examined the American South’s unique
mystery, contradictions, and dark humor. Beginning in the mid-nineteenth
century, American writers, epitomized by Edgar Allan Poe and Nathaniel
Hawthorne, sought to reinterpret the Gothic imagination of their European
counterparts, dramatizing the cultures and characters of a region in the midst
of civil war and its tumultuous aftermath. Decades later, a new generation of
authors—including Tennessee Williams, Carson McCullers, and Toni Morrison—wove
Gothic elements into their own narratives, exploring the complexities of a changing
social terrain and the ancient spirits that linger in its corners.
With works drawn exclusively from the
Johnson Collection, Southern Gothic illuminates how nineteenth- and
twentieth-century artists employed a potent visual language to transcribe the
tensions between the South’s idyllic aura and its historical realities. Often
described as a mood or sensibility rather than a strict set of thematic or
technical conventions, features of the Southern Gothic can include horror,
romance, and the supernatural. While academic painters such as Charles Fraser
and Thomas Noble conveyed the genre’s gloomy tonalities in their canvases,
Aaron Douglas and Harry Hoffman grappled with the injustices of a modern world.
Other artists, including Alexander Brook and Eugene Thomason, investigated
prevailing stereotypes of rural Southerners—a trope often accentuated in
Southern Gothic literature. Collectively, these images demonstrate that
definitions of the Gothic are neither monolithic nor momentary, inviting us,
instead to contemplate how the Southern Gothic legacy continues to inform our
understanding of the American South.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (upper level) Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 - 5 p.m. Thursday: 1 - 9 p.m. Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (Upper Level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
4:30 PM - 5:30 PM
|
|
5:00 PM - 6:00 PM
|
Study Abroad Scholarship Information Session
(Academic)
|
Description: |
During this information session, staff from the Office of International Programs will review available scholarship opportunities for study abroad as well as eligibility requirements, deadlines, and application components with interested students. Free catered dinner will be provided for all attendees.
|
Location: |
Office of International Programs (Michael S. Brown Village Center), OIP/CCBL Lounge |
Contact: |
International Programs
|
|
6:00 PM - 6:30 PM
|
|
6:30 PM - 7:00 PM
|
|
7:00 PM - 7:30 PM
|
|
7:00 PM - 8:00 PM
|
BSA: Meet & Greet, Meadors Multicultural House
(Student Life)
|
Description: |
Join us to meet the current and new members of Black Student Alliance and the new executive board. We will be doing mentee/mentor matchups. Light refreshments will be served.
|
Location: |
AMS House |
Contact: |
Jara Dogan
|
|
7:00 PM - 9:00 PM
|
|
Thursday, September 12, 2019
|
7:00 AM - 10:15 AM
|
|
10:50 AM - Noon
|
Interim 2020 Travel/Study Fair, Main Bldg.
(Academic)
|
Description: |
The Interim 2020 Travel/Study Fair will take place on Thursday, September 12 from 10:50am - noon on the top steps of Main Building. Faculty sponsors will be giving information sessions about their travel projects at 11:00am and 11:30am. This is a great way to learn more about Interim 2020 travel/study projects. We'll see you there!
|
Location: |
Main Building |
Contact: |
International Programs
|
|
11:30 AM - 12:30 PM
|
|
11:30 AM - 12:30 PM
|
|
1:00 PM - 9:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Otherness²: Hiding in Plain Sight by Lee Ann Harrison-Houser, Richardson Family Art Gallery
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Otherness²:
Hiding in Plain Sight explores the outsider’s perspectives and the impact of
“Othering.” During the creative process, Harrison-Houser pursues authenticity
and begins to reveal untold stories in her work. However, she instinctively
hides within the mark-making with her use of symbolism, sgraffito, and
abstraction. Layer after layer of gesso and paint erase her disclosures.
Subsequently, the art installation shares these stories only in a type of
Hide-and-Seek game for the viewer. For deeper connections, the viewer
physically moves to a separate space to match the conceptual titles back to the
abstract squares. Through this physical movement and mindfulness, the
storyteller role shifts away from the artist and moves to the viewer to create
awareness, conversation, and the momentum for change.
September
10- October 12, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Gallery
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday,
Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Gallery |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 9:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Props: Personal Identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts, Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Props:
Personal identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts
The
term “props” brings to mind the objects used in the theater that help establish
the meaning of a scene. In this theater context, the word is shortened from
“properties,” things collectively owned by a theater group. But could the term
also reflect the notion that props show “properties” of a character, offering
layers of information and meaning to a viewer.? “Props” is also a slang term,
meaning “proper respect.” In this show, we analyze the props in photographic
portraits taken by RSR between 1920-1936 to see the way that the “props”—most
often objects chosen by the sitters themselves—tell us something about the
self-identity of the sitters. The objects chosen often underscore the proper
respect due the sitters based on their attainments, but also can give
insights—in an otherwise very formulaic genre—into the inner desires and
predilections of the sitters. Props thus can help us see beyond the surface,
or, perhaps conversely, can reify socially-agreed upon tropes.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (lower level)
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 9:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Southern Gothic: Literary Intersection with Art from the Johnson Collection, Richardson Family Art Museum (upper level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
From the haunting novels of William
Faulkner to the gritty short stories of Flannery O'Connor, the Southern Gothic
literary tradition has exhumed and examined the American South’s unique
mystery, contradictions, and dark humor. Beginning in the mid-nineteenth
century, American writers, epitomized by Edgar Allan Poe and Nathaniel
Hawthorne, sought to reinterpret the Gothic imagination of their European
counterparts, dramatizing the cultures and characters of a region in the midst
of civil war and its tumultuous aftermath. Decades later, a new generation of
authors—including Tennessee Williams, Carson McCullers, and Toni Morrison—wove
Gothic elements into their own narratives, exploring the complexities of a changing
social terrain and the ancient spirits that linger in its corners.
With works drawn exclusively from the
Johnson Collection, Southern Gothic illuminates how nineteenth- and
twentieth-century artists employed a potent visual language to transcribe the
tensions between the South’s idyllic aura and its historical realities. Often
described as a mood or sensibility rather than a strict set of thematic or
technical conventions, features of the Southern Gothic can include horror,
romance, and the supernatural. While academic painters such as Charles Fraser
and Thomas Noble conveyed the genre’s gloomy tonalities in their canvases,
Aaron Douglas and Harry Hoffman grappled with the injustices of a modern world.
Other artists, including Alexander Brook and Eugene Thomason, investigated
prevailing stereotypes of rural Southerners—a trope often accentuated in
Southern Gothic literature. Collectively, these images demonstrate that
definitions of the Gothic are neither monolithic nor momentary, inviting us,
instead to contemplate how the Southern Gothic legacy continues to inform our
understanding of the American South.
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (Upper Level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
4:30 PM - 5:00 PM
|
|
5:00 PM - 5:30 PM
|
|
5:30 PM - 6:00 PM
|
|
6:00 PM - 6:30 PM
|
|
6:00 PM - 7:30 PM
|
Black and Abroad, Office of International Programs
(Student Life)
|
Description: |
Join the Office of International Programs and the Office of Diversity and Inclusion to learn about the experience of African-American students and faculty while studying abroad. Participants will be sharing their experiences and discuss how to be successful in unfamiliar places and thrive while experiencing other cultures.
|
Location: |
Office of International Programs |
Contact: |
Nadia Glover
|
|
9:00 PM - 11:55 PM
|
|
Friday, September 13, 2019
|
7:00 AM - 10:15 AM
|
Annual Employee Wellness Screenings, 2nd Floor of RMSC
(Student Life)
|
Description: |
Please sign up for the Annual Employee Wellness
screening. These will take place on Wednesday through Friday on August 7- 9, and September 11- 13 from 7:00 till 10:00am. The site will be the second floor of the Psychology Suites near the stairs and elevator. Here is
the link to sign up https://www.signupgenius.com/go/10C0F48A5A92CA0F58-2019
|
Location: |
2nd Floor Milliken |
Contact: |
Lisa Lefebvre
|
|
10:00 AM - Noon
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Otherness²: Hiding in Plain Sight by Lee Ann Harrison-Houser, Richardson Family Art Gallery
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Otherness²:
Hiding in Plain Sight explores the outsider’s perspectives and the impact of
“Othering.” During the creative process, Harrison-Houser pursues authenticity
and begins to reveal untold stories in her work. However, she instinctively
hides within the mark-making with her use of symbolism, sgraffito, and
abstraction. Layer after layer of gesso and paint erase her disclosures.
Subsequently, the art installation shares these stories only in a type of
Hide-and-Seek game for the viewer. For deeper connections, the viewer
physically moves to a separate space to match the conceptual titles back to the
abstract squares. Through this physical movement and mindfulness, the
storyteller role shifts away from the artist and moves to the viewer to create
awareness, conversation, and the momentum for change.
September
10- October 12, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Gallery
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday,
Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Gallery |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Props: Personal Identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts, Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Props:
Personal identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts
The
term “props” brings to mind the objects used in the theater that help establish
the meaning of a scene. In this theater context, the word is shortened from
“properties,” things collectively owned by a theater group. But could the term
also reflect the notion that props show “properties” of a character, offering
layers of information and meaning to a viewer.? “Props” is also a slang term,
meaning “proper respect.” In this show, we analyze the props in photographic
portraits taken by RSR between 1920-1936 to see the way that the “props”—most
often objects chosen by the sitters themselves—tell us something about the
self-identity of the sitters. The objects chosen often underscore the proper
respect due the sitters based on their attainments, but also can give
insights—in an otherwise very formulaic genre—into the inner desires and
predilections of the sitters. Props thus can help us see beyond the surface,
or, perhaps conversely, can reify socially-agreed upon tropes.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (lower level)
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Southern Gothic: Intersection of Art and Literature in the Johnson Collection, Richardson Family Art Museum (upper level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Southern
Gothic: Intersections of Art and Literature in the Johnson Collection
From Edgar
Allen Poe’s haunting tale of The Gold Bug (1843) to Flannery
O'Connor’s biting short story “Good Country People” (1955), the Southern
Gothic literary tradition has exhumed the American South’s aberrations,
contradictions, and unique sense of dark humor. Drawing exclusively
from the Johnson Collection, Southern Gothic examines how
nineteenth-and twentieth-century artists borrowed from their literary
peers, using a potent visual language to address the tensions between the
South’s idyllic visions and its historical realities.This exhibition is
guest curated by Elizabeth Driscoll Smith, a Ph.D. candidate from the
University California, Santa Barbara, and the Johnson Collection’s 2019
graduate fellow.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (upper level) Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday - 1 - 5 p.m. Thursdays - 1 - 9 p.m. Exhibit closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (Upper Level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
2:00 PM - 3:00 PM
|
Faculty-Staff Learning Community meeting, Center for Community-Based Learning Lobby
(Academic)
|
Description: |
First meeting of Faculty-Staff Learning Community (FSLC) on Networked Civic Engagement: Community-Based Praxis and Research. Participants in this FSLC will meet once monthly to develop a shared understanding of how better to support engagement and research by Wofford students in community context and to explore evidence-informed practices in community-based learning (CBL). All experience levels welcome.
|
Location: |
Center for Community-Based Learning Lobby |
Contact: |
Laura Barbas-Rhoden
|
|
3:00 PM - 4:00 PM
|
|
4:00 PM - 4:30 PM
|
|
4:30 PM - 5:00 PM
|
|
5:00 PM - 5:30 PM
|
|
5:00 PM - 7:00 PM
|
Mid Autumn Festival Celebration, The Pavilion
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
The
Chinese Program and The Asian Studies Program would like to invite you to attend the Mid-Autumn Festival.
The Mid-Autumn Festival, or Moon Festival, is the second most important
traditional holiday in China. It is also broadly celebrated in East Asia,
Southeast Asia, and their overseas communities. This festival commemorates
the autumn harvest while enjoying a full moon with family and friends. It is
similar to Thanksgiving in U.S and is celebrated on the 15th day of August in
the lunar calendar. This year it takes place on Friday, September 13th. Our
celebration event will take place on September 13th (the Roman
version), 2019, from 5:00-7:00 p.m. at the Pavilion. Please join us for
Chinese food, moon cake, fruits, games, music, and crafting activities.
|
|
Location: |
The Pavilion |
Contact: |
Dr. Yongfang Zhang
|
|
7:00 PM - 9:00 PM
|
|
Saturday, September 14, 2019
|
11:30 AM - 1:30 PM
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Otherness²: Hiding in Plain Sight by Lee Ann Harrison-Houser, Richardson Family Art Gallery
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Otherness²:
Hiding in Plain Sight explores the outsider’s perspectives and the impact of
“Othering.” During the creative process, Harrison-Houser pursues authenticity
and begins to reveal untold stories in her work. However, she instinctively
hides within the mark-making with her use of symbolism, sgraffito, and
abstraction. Layer after layer of gesso and paint erase her disclosures.
Subsequently, the art installation shares these stories only in a type of
Hide-and-Seek game for the viewer. For deeper connections, the viewer
physically moves to a separate space to match the conceptual titles back to the
abstract squares. Through this physical movement and mindfulness, the
storyteller role shifts away from the artist and moves to the viewer to create
awareness, conversation, and the momentum for change.
September
10- October 12, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Gallery
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday,
Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Gallery |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Props: Personal Identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts, Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Props:
Personal identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts
The
term “props” brings to mind the objects used in the theater that help establish
the meaning of a scene. In this theater context, the word is shortened from
“properties,” things collectively owned by a theater group. But could the term
also reflect the notion that props show “properties” of a character, offering
layers of information and meaning to a viewer.? “Props” is also a slang term,
meaning “proper respect.” In this show, we analyze the props in photographic
portraits taken by RSR between 1920-1936 to see the way that the “props”—most
often objects chosen by the sitters themselves—tell us something about the
self-identity of the sitters. The objects chosen often underscore the proper
respect due the sitters based on their attainments, but also can give
insights—in an otherwise very formulaic genre—into the inner desires and
predilections of the sitters. Props thus can help us see beyond the surface,
or, perhaps conversely, can reify socially-agreed upon tropes.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (lower level)
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Southern Gothic: Literary Intersection of Art from the Johnson Collection, Richardson Family Art Museum (upper level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
From the haunting novels of William
Faulkner to the gritty short stories of Flannery O'Connor, the Southern Gothic
literary tradition has exhumed and examined the American South’s unique
mystery, contradictions, and dark humor. Beginning in the mid-nineteenth
century, American writers, epitomized by Edgar Allan Poe and Nathaniel
Hawthorne, sought to reinterpret the Gothic imagination of their European
counterparts, dramatizing the cultures and characters of a region in the midst
of civil war and its tumultuous aftermath. Decades later, a new generation of
authors—including Tennessee Williams, Carson McCullers, and Toni Morrison—wove
Gothic elements into their own narratives, exploring the complexities of a changing
social terrain and the ancient spirits that linger in its corners.
With works drawn exclusively from the
Johnson Collection, Southern Gothic illuminates how nineteenth- and
twentieth-century artists employed a potent visual language to transcribe the
tensions between the South’s idyllic aura and its historical realities. Often
described as a mood or sensibility rather than a strict set of thematic or
technical conventions, features of the Southern Gothic can include horror,
romance, and the supernatural. While academic painters such as Charles Fraser
and Thomas Noble conveyed the genre’s gloomy tonalities in their canvases,
Aaron Douglas and Harry Hoffman grappled with the injustices of a modern world.
Other artists, including Alexander Brook and Eugene Thomason, investigated
prevailing stereotypes of rural Southerners—a trope often accentuated in
Southern Gothic literature. Collectively, these images demonstrate that
definitions of the Gothic are neither monolithic nor momentary, inviting us,
instead to contemplate how the Southern Gothic legacy continues to inform our
understanding of the American South.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (upper level) Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday: 1 - 5 p.m. Thursday: 1 - 9 p.m. Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (Upper Level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
6:00 PM - 9:00 PM
|
|
Sunday, September 15, 2019
|
(All Day)
|
|
Monday, September 16, 2019
|
6:30 AM - 7:00 AM
|
|
9:30 AM - 11:00 AM
|
|
11:00 AM
|
|
4:30 PM - 5:30 PM
|
|
6:00 PM - 6:30 PM
|
|
6:00 PM - 8:00 PM
|
WAC Movie Night Presents: Yesterday, McMillan Theater
(Student Life)
|
Description: |
Come join WAC for the
first Movie Night of the school year! Free popcorn will be provided. Here is a
synopsis: After a freak accident during a worldwide blackout, struggling
musician Jack Malik wakes to discover that he is the only person in the world
to remember The Beatles. Using this newfound benefit to his advantage, Jack
begins plagiarizing the work of the legendary band to launch his career to
superstardom.
|
Location: |
McMillan Theater |
Contact: |
Alexa Riley
|
|
6:30 PM - 7:00 PM
|
|
7:00 PM - 7:30 PM
|
|
Tuesday, September 17, 2019
|
11:00 AM - 11:30 AM
|
January internship information session #1, McMillan Theater
(Academic)
|
Description: |
This is the first of three information sessions during the free period on the 17th about interim internships for 2020. An overview of all internship opportunities will be given, but special attention will be given to the Learning Work interim. If students are not able to attend this session or the 11:30 or 12:00 ones, they should contact Dr. Anderson, Interim Coordinator, to get the overview handout. You can email him at andersonak@wofford.edu
|
Location: |
McMillan Theater |
Contact: |
A K Anderson
|
|
11:00 AM - Noon
|
Constitution Day Lecture: "How Democratic is the Constitution?", Olin Theater
(Academic)
|
Description: |
Patrick Coby, Esther Booth Wiley Professor of Government at Smith College will give this year's Constitution Day lecture entitled "How Democratic is the Constitution" in Olin Theater at 11am on Tuesday, September 17th. Please join us for this celebration of Constitution Day.
|
Location: |
Olin Teaching Theater (Room 101) |
Contact: |
David Alvis
|
|
11:30 AM - 12:30 PM
|
|
11:30 AM - Noon
|
January internship information session #2, McMillan Theater
(Academic)
|
Description: |
This is the second of three information sessions during the free period on the 17th about interim internships for 2020. An overview of all internship opportunities will be given, but special attention will be given to the Learning Work interim. If students are not able to attend this session or the 11:00 or 12:00 ones, they should contact Dr. Anderson, Interim Coordinator, to get the overview handout. You can email him at andersonak@wofford.edu
|
Location: |
McMillan Theater |
Contact: |
A. K. Anderson
|
|
11:45 AM - 12:50 PM
|
|
Noon - 12:30 PM
|
January internship information session #3, McMillan Theater
(Academic)
|
Description: |
This is the third of three information sessions during the free period on the 17th about interim internships for 2020. An overview of all internship opportunities will be given, but special attention will be given to the Learning Work interim. If students are not able to attend this session or the 11:00 or 11:30 ones, they should contact Dr. Anderson, Interim Coordinator, to get the overview handout. You can email him at andersonak@wofford.edu
|
Location: |
McMillan Theater |
Contact: |
A K Anderson
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Otherness²: Hiding in Plain Sight by Lee Ann Harrison-Houser, Richardson Family Art Gallery
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Otherness²:
Hiding in Plain Sight explores the outsider’s perspectives and the impact of
“Othering.” During the creative process, Harrison-Houser pursues authenticity
and begins to reveal untold stories in her work. However, she instinctively
hides within the mark-making with her use of symbolism, sgraffito, and
abstraction. Layer after layer of gesso and paint erase her disclosures.
Subsequently, the art installation shares these stories only in a type of
Hide-and-Seek game for the viewer. For deeper connections, the viewer
physically moves to a separate space to match the conceptual titles back to the
abstract squares. Through this physical movement and mindfulness, the
storyteller role shifts away from the artist and moves to the viewer to create
awareness, conversation, and the momentum for change.
September
10- October 12, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Gallery
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday,
Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Gallery |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Props: Personal Identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts, Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Props:
Personal identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts
The
term “props” brings to mind the objects used in the theater that help establish
the meaning of a scene. In this theater context, the word is shortened from
“properties,” things collectively owned by a theater group. But could the term
also reflect the notion that props show “properties” of a character, offering
layers of information and meaning to a viewer.? “Props” is also a slang term,
meaning “proper respect.” In this show, we analyze the props in photographic
portraits taken by RSR between 1920-1936 to see the way that the “props”—most
often objects chosen by the sitters themselves—tell us something about the
self-identity of the sitters. The objects chosen often underscore the proper
respect due the sitters based on their attainments, but also can give
insights—in an otherwise very formulaic genre—into the inner desires and
predilections of the sitters. Props thus can help us see beyond the surface,
or, perhaps conversely, can reify socially-agreed upon tropes.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (lower level)
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Southern Gothic: Literary Intersections w/Art from the Johnson Collection, Richardson Family Art Museum (upper level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
From the haunting novels of William
Faulkner to the gritty short stories of Flannery O'Connor, the Southern Gothic
literary tradition has exhumed and examined the American South’s unique
mystery, contradictions, and dark humor. Beginning in the mid-nineteenth
century, American writers, epitomized by Edgar Allan Poe and Nathaniel
Hawthorne, sought to reinterpret the Gothic imagination of their European
counterparts, dramatizing the cultures and characters of a region in the midst
of civil war and its tumultuous aftermath. Decades later, a new generation of
authors—including Tennessee Williams, Carson McCullers, and Toni Morrison—wove
Gothic elements into their own narratives, exploring the complexities of a changing
social terrain and the ancient spirits that linger in its corners.
With works drawn exclusively from the
Johnson Collection, Southern Gothic illuminates how nineteenth- and
twentieth-century artists employed a potent visual language to transcribe the
tensions between the South’s idyllic aura and its historical realities. Often
described as a mood or sensibility rather than a strict set of thematic or
technical conventions, features of the Southern Gothic can include horror,
romance, and the supernatural. While academic painters such as Charles Fraser
and Thomas Noble conveyed the genre’s gloomy tonalities in their canvases,
Aaron Douglas and Harry Hoffman grappled with the injustices of a modern world.
Other artists, including Alexander Brook and Eugene Thomason, investigated
prevailing stereotypes of rural Southerners—a trope often accentuated in
Southern Gothic literature. Collectively, these images demonstrate that
definitions of the Gothic are neither monolithic nor momentary, inviting us,
instead to contemplate how the Southern Gothic legacy continues to inform our
understanding of the American South.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (upper level) Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday - 1 - 5 p.m. Thursday - 1 - 9 p.m. Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (Upper Level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
4:30 PM - 5:00 PM
|
|
5:00 PM - 5:30 PM
|
|
5:00 PM
|
|
5:30 PM - 6:00 PM
|
|
6:00 PM - 6:30 PM
|
|
7:00 PM
|
|
7:00 PM - 8:30 PM
|
Imagine Science Films: The Wofford Tour III, McMillan Theater
(Academic)
|
Description: |
The Imagine Science Films Festival is held every fall in New York City. For the event, film makers from all over the world submit works that humanize science through the lens of personal reflection and cultural metaphor. The result is a collection of interdisciplinary art films tangentially focused on science and society. This year, the Imagine Science organization has created a custom-made mini-film, just for Wofford College. This mini-film is a collection of short features, all centered on the theme of trans-humanism, the use of future technology to enhance our lives and potentially alter our physical form. Please join us for this unique event; the popcorn and candy concessions are free.
|
Location: |
McMillan Theater in the Student Center |
Contact: |
Steven Zides
|
|
8:30 PM - 9:00 PM
|
|
Wednesday, September 18, 2019
|
6:30 AM - 7:00 AM
|
|
(All Day)
|
Dental Interim, RMSC306
(Academic)
|
Description: |
If you are interested in registering for the interim project "An Introduction to Dental Medicine, please sign the list in the Chemistry Department. Only 8 students can register and you need an override to get in. Students must have a minimum gpa of 3.2. Preference will be given to juniors and seniors. Higher gpas and making your request known earlier will help your chances of getting an override.
|
Location: |
RMSC306 |
Contact: |
Dr. Charles Bass
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Otherness²: Hiding in Plain Sight by Lee Ann Harrison-Houser, Richardson Family Art Gallery
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Otherness²:
Hiding in Plain Sight explores the outsider’s perspectives and the impact of
“Othering.” During the creative process, Harrison-Houser pursues authenticity
and begins to reveal untold stories in her work. However, she instinctively
hides within the mark-making with her use of symbolism, sgraffito, and
abstraction. Layer after layer of gesso and paint erase her disclosures.
Subsequently, the art installation shares these stories only in a type of
Hide-and-Seek game for the viewer. For deeper connections, the viewer
physically moves to a separate space to match the conceptual titles back to the
abstract squares. Through this physical movement and mindfulness, the
storyteller role shifts away from the artist and moves to the viewer to create
awareness, conversation, and the momentum for change.
September
10- October 12, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Gallery
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday,
Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Gallery |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Props: Personal Identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts, Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Props:
Personal identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts
The
term “props” brings to mind the objects used in the theater that help establish
the meaning of a scene. In this theater context, the word is shortened from
“properties,” things collectively owned by a theater group. But could the term
also reflect the notion that props show “properties” of a character, offering
layers of information and meaning to a viewer.? “Props” is also a slang term,
meaning “proper respect.” In this show, we analyze the props in photographic
portraits taken by RSR between 1920-1936 to see the way that the “props”—most
often objects chosen by the sitters themselves—tell us something about the
self-identity of the sitters. The objects chosen often underscore the proper
respect due the sitters based on their attainments, but also can give
insights—in an otherwise very formulaic genre—into the inner desires and
predilections of the sitters. Props thus can help us see beyond the surface,
or, perhaps conversely, can reify socially-agreed upon tropes.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (lower level)
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Southern Gothic: Literary Intersection with Art from the Johnson Collection, Richardson Family Art Museum (upper level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
From the haunting novels of William
Faulkner to the gritty short stories of Flannery O'Connor, the Southern Gothic
literary tradition has exhumed and examined the American South’s unique
mystery, contradictions, and dark humor. Beginning in the mid-nineteenth
century, American writers, epitomized by Edgar Allan Poe and Nathaniel
Hawthorne, sought to reinterpret the Gothic imagination of their European
counterparts, dramatizing the cultures and characters of a region in the midst
of civil war and its tumultuous aftermath. Decades later, a new generation of
authors—including Tennessee Williams, Carson McCullers, and Toni Morrison—wove
Gothic elements into their own narratives, exploring the complexities of a changing
social terrain and the ancient spirits that linger in its corners.
With works drawn exclusively from the
Johnson Collection, Southern Gothic illuminates how nineteenth- and
twentieth-century artists employed a potent visual language to transcribe the
tensions between the South’s idyllic aura and its historical realities. Often
described as a mood or sensibility rather than a strict set of thematic or
technical conventions, features of the Southern Gothic can include horror,
romance, and the supernatural. While academic painters such as Charles Fraser
and Thomas Noble conveyed the genre’s gloomy tonalities in their canvases,
Aaron Douglas and Harry Hoffman grappled with the injustices of a modern world.
Other artists, including Alexander Brook and Eugene Thomason, investigated
prevailing stereotypes of rural Southerners—a trope often accentuated in
Southern Gothic literature. Collectively, these images demonstrate that
definitions of the Gothic are neither monolithic nor momentary, inviting us,
instead to contemplate how the Southern Gothic legacy continues to inform our
understanding of the American South.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (upper level) Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 - 5 p.m. Thursday: 1 - 9 p.m. Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (Upper Level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
3:30 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Imagine Science Films: The Wofford Tour III, McMillan Theater
(Academic)
|
Description: |
The Imagine Science Films Festival is held every fall in New York City. For the event, film makers from all over the world submit works that humanize science through the lens of personal reflection and cultural metaphor. The result is a collection of interdisciplinary art films tangentially focused on science and society. This year, the Imagine Science organization has created a custom-made mini-film, just for Wofford College. This mini-film is a collection of short features, all centered on the theme of trans-humanism, the use of future technology to enhance our lives and potentially alter our physical form. Please join us for this unique event; the popcorn and candy concessions are free.
|
Location: |
McMillan Theater in the Student Center |
Contact: |
Steve Zides
|
|
4:30 PM - 5:30 PM
|
|
6:00 PM - 6:30 PM
|
|
6:30 PM - 7:00 PM
|
|
7:00 PM - 7:30 PM
|
|
7:00 PM - 8:30 PM
|
Imagine Science Films: The Wofford Tour III, McMillan Theater
(Academic)
|
Description: |
The Imagine Science Films Festival is held every fall in New York City. For the event, film makers from all over the world submit works that humanize science through the lens of personal reflection and cultural metaphor. The result is a collection of interdisciplinary art films tangentially focused on science and society. This year, the Imagine Science organization has created a custom-made mini-film, just for Wofford College. This mini-film is a collection of short features, all centered on the theme of trans-humanism, the use of future technology to enhance our lives and potentially alter our physical form. Please join us for this unique event; the popcorn and candy concessions are free.
|
Location: |
McMillan Theater in the Student Center |
Contact: |
Steve Zides
|
|
7:30 PM - 8:30 PM
|
|
Thursday, September 19, 2019
|
(All Day)
|
|
11:00 AM - Noon
|
Pell Grant Recipients: Gilman Scholarship Information Session, MSBVC, OIP/CCBL Lounge
(Academic)
|
Description: |
The
Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship is a scholarship opportunity
available to students who receive a Federal Pell grant. Eligible students may
receive up to $8,000 in funding for a study abroad or intern abroad experience.
During this information session, staff from the Office of International
Programs will review the scholarship goals, eligibility requirements, and
application components with interested students.Free catered lunch will be
provided for all attendees.
|
Location: |
Office of International Programs (Michael S. Brown Village Center), OIP/CCBL Lounge |
Contact: |
International Programs
|
|
11:00 AM - 12:30 PM
|
|
11:30 AM - 12:30 PM
|
|
1:00 PM - 9:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Otherness²: Hiding in Plain Sight by Lee Ann Harrison-Houser, Richardson Family Art Gallery
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Otherness²:
Hiding in Plain Sight explores the outsider’s perspectives and the impact of
“Othering.” During the creative process, Harrison-Houser pursues authenticity
and begins to reveal untold stories in her work. However, she instinctively
hides within the mark-making with her use of symbolism, sgraffito, and
abstraction. Layer after layer of gesso and paint erase her disclosures.
Subsequently, the art installation shares these stories only in a type of
Hide-and-Seek game for the viewer. For deeper connections, the viewer
physically moves to a separate space to match the conceptual titles back to the
abstract squares. Through this physical movement and mindfulness, the
storyteller role shifts away from the artist and moves to the viewer to create
awareness, conversation, and the momentum for change.
September
10- October 12, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Gallery
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday,
Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Gallery |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 9:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Props: Personal Identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts, Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Props:
Personal identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts
The
term “props” brings to mind the objects used in the theater that help establish
the meaning of a scene. In this theater context, the word is shortened from
“properties,” things collectively owned by a theater group. But could the term
also reflect the notion that props show “properties” of a character, offering
layers of information and meaning to a viewer.? “Props” is also a slang term,
meaning “proper respect.” In this show, we analyze the props in photographic
portraits taken by RSR between 1920-1936 to see the way that the “props”—most
often objects chosen by the sitters themselves—tell us something about the
self-identity of the sitters. The objects chosen often underscore the proper
respect due the sitters based on their attainments, but also can give
insights—in an otherwise very formulaic genre—into the inner desires and
predilections of the sitters. Props thus can help us see beyond the surface,
or, perhaps conversely, can reify socially-agreed upon tropes.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (lower level)
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 9:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Southern Gothic: Literary Intersection with Art from the Johnson Collection, Richardson Family Art Museum (upper level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
From the haunting novels of William
Faulkner to the gritty short stories of Flannery O'Connor, the Southern Gothic
literary tradition has exhumed and examined the American South’s unique
mystery, contradictions, and dark humor. Beginning in the mid-nineteenth
century, American writers, epitomized by Edgar Allan Poe and Nathaniel
Hawthorne, sought to reinterpret the Gothic imagination of their European
counterparts, dramatizing the cultures and characters of a region in the midst
of civil war and its tumultuous aftermath. Decades later, a new generation of
authors—including Tennessee Williams, Carson McCullers, and Toni Morrison—wove
Gothic elements into their own narratives, exploring the complexities of a changing
social terrain and the ancient spirits that linger in its corners.
With works drawn exclusively from the
Johnson Collection, Southern Gothic illuminates how nineteenth- and
twentieth-century artists employed a potent visual language to transcribe the
tensions between the South’s idyllic aura and its historical realities. Often
described as a mood or sensibility rather than a strict set of thematic or
technical conventions, features of the Southern Gothic can include horror,
romance, and the supernatural. While academic painters such as Charles Fraser
and Thomas Noble conveyed the genre’s gloomy tonalities in their canvases,
Aaron Douglas and Harry Hoffman grappled with the injustices of a modern world.
Other artists, including Alexander Brook and Eugene Thomason, investigated
prevailing stereotypes of rural Southerners—a trope often accentuated in
Southern Gothic literature. Collectively, these images demonstrate that
definitions of the Gothic are neither monolithic nor momentary, inviting us,
instead to contemplate how the Southern Gothic legacy continues to inform our
understanding of the American South.
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (Upper Level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
4:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Equity, Justice, and Participatory Inclusion: Addressing Disparities and Barriers in Education, Olin 101
(multiple cals)
|
Description: |
Dr.
David G. Martínez, Assistant Professor of Educational Leadership and Policies in the
College of Education at the University of South Carolina, will facilitate an
interactive forum about structures
which create educational opportunity barriers for marginalized, LatinX, and
Indigenous students. The forum will focus on the valued types of equity and
social justice within fiscal policy and law, and the alternative forms of
equity and social justice that with participatory inclusion could mitigate some
of the continued disparity we see in education.
|
Location: |
Olin 101 |
Contact: |
Laura Barbas-Rhoden
|
|
4:30 PM - 5:00 PM
|
|
5:00 PM - 5:30 PM
|
|
5:00 PM - 9:00 PM
|
|
5:00 PM - 9:00 PM
|
|
5:30 PM - 6:00 PM
|
|
6:00 PM - 6:30 PM
|
|
7:00 PM
|
|
7:00 PM - 8:30 PM
|
Imagine Science Films: The Wofford Tour III, McMillan Theater
(Academic)
|
Description: |
The Imagine Science Films Festival is held every fall in New York City. For the event, film makers from all over the world submit works that humanize science through the lens of personal reflection and cultural metaphor. The result is a collection of interdisciplinary art films tangentially focused on science and society. This year, the Imagine Science organization has created a custom-made mini-film, just for Wofford College. This mini-film is a collection of short features, all centered on the theme of trans-humanism, the use of future technology to enhance our lives and potentially alter our physical form. Please join us for this unique event; the popcorn and candy concessions are free.
|
Location: |
McMillan Theater in the Student Center |
Contact: |
Steve Zides
|
|
8:30 PM - 9:00 PM
|
|
Friday, September 20, 2019
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Otherness²: Hiding in Plain Sight by Lee Ann Harrison-Houser, Richardson Family Art Gallery
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Otherness²:
Hiding in Plain Sight explores the outsider’s perspectives and the impact of
“Othering.” During the creative process, Harrison-Houser pursues authenticity
and begins to reveal untold stories in her work. However, she instinctively
hides within the mark-making with her use of symbolism, sgraffito, and
abstraction. Layer after layer of gesso and paint erase her disclosures.
Subsequently, the art installation shares these stories only in a type of
Hide-and-Seek game for the viewer. For deeper connections, the viewer
physically moves to a separate space to match the conceptual titles back to the
abstract squares. Through this physical movement and mindfulness, the
storyteller role shifts away from the artist and moves to the viewer to create
awareness, conversation, and the momentum for change.
September
10- October 12, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Gallery
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday,
Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Gallery |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Props: Personal Identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts, Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Props:
Personal identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts
The
term “props” brings to mind the objects used in the theater that help establish
the meaning of a scene. In this theater context, the word is shortened from
“properties,” things collectively owned by a theater group. But could the term
also reflect the notion that props show “properties” of a character, offering
layers of information and meaning to a viewer.? “Props” is also a slang term,
meaning “proper respect.” In this show, we analyze the props in photographic
portraits taken by RSR between 1920-1936 to see the way that the “props”—most
often objects chosen by the sitters themselves—tell us something about the
self-identity of the sitters. The objects chosen often underscore the proper
respect due the sitters based on their attainments, but also can give
insights—in an otherwise very formulaic genre—into the inner desires and
predilections of the sitters. Props thus can help us see beyond the surface,
or, perhaps conversely, can reify socially-agreed upon tropes.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (lower level)
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Southern Gothic: Intersection of Art and Literature in the Johnson Collection, Richardson Family Art Museum (upper level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Southern
Gothic: Intersections of Art and Literature in the Johnson Collection
From Edgar
Allen Poe’s haunting tale of The Gold Bug (1843) to Flannery
O'Connor’s biting short story “Good Country People” (1955), the Southern
Gothic literary tradition has exhumed the American South’s aberrations,
contradictions, and unique sense of dark humor. Drawing exclusively
from the Johnson Collection, Southern Gothic examines how
nineteenth-and twentieth-century artists borrowed from their literary
peers, using a potent visual language to address the tensions between the
South’s idyllic visions and its historical realities.This exhibition is
guest curated by Elizabeth Driscoll Smith, a Ph.D. candidate from the
University California, Santa Barbara, and the Johnson Collection’s 2019
graduate fellow.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (upper level) Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday - 1 - 5 p.m. Thursdays - 1 - 9 p.m. Exhibit closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (Upper Level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
3:00 PM - 4:00 PM
|
|
4:00 PM - 4:30 PM
|
|
4:30 PM - 5:00 PM
|
|
5:00 PM - 5:30 PM
|
|
Saturday, September 21, 2019
|
(All Day)
|
Fall Hospitality Day #1
(Admission)
|
Description: |
https://begin.wofford.edu/register/FallHospitalityDaySept19 Enjoy an informative day as you tour the campus with Wofford students, attend special interest sessions, and cheer on the Terriers. You will also benefit from the opportunity to meet other high school students and families as they engage in the college search process. Hospitality Days are offered each Fall and Spring. |
Location: |
Various Locations on Campus |
Contact: |
Mary Carman Jordan
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Otherness²: Hiding in Plain Sight by Lee Ann Harrison-Houser, Richardson Family Art Gallery
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Otherness²:
Hiding in Plain Sight explores the outsider’s perspectives and the impact of
“Othering.” During the creative process, Harrison-Houser pursues authenticity
and begins to reveal untold stories in her work. However, she instinctively
hides within the mark-making with her use of symbolism, sgraffito, and
abstraction. Layer after layer of gesso and paint erase her disclosures.
Subsequently, the art installation shares these stories only in a type of
Hide-and-Seek game for the viewer. For deeper connections, the viewer
physically moves to a separate space to match the conceptual titles back to the
abstract squares. Through this physical movement and mindfulness, the
storyteller role shifts away from the artist and moves to the viewer to create
awareness, conversation, and the momentum for change.
September
10- October 12, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Gallery
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday,
Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Gallery |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Props: Personal Identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts, Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Props:
Personal identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts
The
term “props” brings to mind the objects used in the theater that help establish
the meaning of a scene. In this theater context, the word is shortened from
“properties,” things collectively owned by a theater group. But could the term
also reflect the notion that props show “properties” of a character, offering
layers of information and meaning to a viewer.? “Props” is also a slang term,
meaning “proper respect.” In this show, we analyze the props in photographic
portraits taken by RSR between 1920-1936 to see the way that the “props”—most
often objects chosen by the sitters themselves—tell us something about the
self-identity of the sitters. The objects chosen often underscore the proper
respect due the sitters based on their attainments, but also can give
insights—in an otherwise very formulaic genre—into the inner desires and
predilections of the sitters. Props thus can help us see beyond the surface,
or, perhaps conversely, can reify socially-agreed upon tropes.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (lower level)
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Southern Gothic: Literary Intersection of Art from the Johnson Collection, Richardson Family Art Museum (upper level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
From the haunting novels of William
Faulkner to the gritty short stories of Flannery O'Connor, the Southern Gothic
literary tradition has exhumed and examined the American South’s unique
mystery, contradictions, and dark humor. Beginning in the mid-nineteenth
century, American writers, epitomized by Edgar Allan Poe and Nathaniel
Hawthorne, sought to reinterpret the Gothic imagination of their European
counterparts, dramatizing the cultures and characters of a region in the midst
of civil war and its tumultuous aftermath. Decades later, a new generation of
authors—including Tennessee Williams, Carson McCullers, and Toni Morrison—wove
Gothic elements into their own narratives, exploring the complexities of a changing
social terrain and the ancient spirits that linger in its corners.
With works drawn exclusively from the
Johnson Collection, Southern Gothic illuminates how nineteenth- and
twentieth-century artists employed a potent visual language to transcribe the
tensions between the South’s idyllic aura and its historical realities. Often
described as a mood or sensibility rather than a strict set of thematic or
technical conventions, features of the Southern Gothic can include horror,
romance, and the supernatural. While academic painters such as Charles Fraser
and Thomas Noble conveyed the genre’s gloomy tonalities in their canvases,
Aaron Douglas and Harry Hoffman grappled with the injustices of a modern world.
Other artists, including Alexander Brook and Eugene Thomason, investigated
prevailing stereotypes of rural Southerners—a trope often accentuated in
Southern Gothic literature. Collectively, these images demonstrate that
definitions of the Gothic are neither monolithic nor momentary, inviting us,
instead to contemplate how the Southern Gothic legacy continues to inform our
understanding of the American South.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (upper level) Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday: 1 - 5 p.m. Thursday: 1 - 9 p.m. Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (Upper Level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
6:00 PM - 9:00 PM
|
|
Sunday, September 22, 2019
|
5:00 PM - 5:30 PM
|
|
5:30 PM - 6:00 PM
|
|
Monday, September 23, 2019
|
6:30 AM - 7:00 AM
|
|
4:30 PM - 5:30 PM
|
|
6:00 PM - 6:30 PM
|
|
6:30 PM - 7:00 PM
|
|
7:00 PM - 7:30 PM
|
|
8:00 PM - 9:00 PM
|
Entrepreneurship Meet-up, The Space
(Other)
|
Description: |
Join us for a community gathering of Wofford’s innovators and entrepreneurs. If you’re interested in learning more about entrepreneurship at Wofford, operating your own startup company or anywhere in between, this meet-up is for you. Come out and get connected to a welcoming and supportive community of student entrepreneurs and innovators. All are welcome - Food and drinks will be catered - Register to attend on Handshake. Contact Tyler Senecal at senecaltj@wofford.edu for more information.
|
Location: |
The Space |
Contact: |
Senecal
|
|
Tuesday, September 24, 2019
|
11:00 AM - 12:45 PM
|
|
11:00 AM - 1:00 PM
|
|
11:30 AM - 12:30 PM
|
|
11:30 AM - 12:50 PM
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Otherness²: Hiding in Plain Sight by Lee Ann Harrison-Houser, Richardson Family Art Gallery
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Otherness²:
Hiding in Plain Sight explores the outsider’s perspectives and the impact of
“Othering.” During the creative process, Harrison-Houser pursues authenticity
and begins to reveal untold stories in her work. However, she instinctively
hides within the mark-making with her use of symbolism, sgraffito, and
abstraction. Layer after layer of gesso and paint erase her disclosures.
Subsequently, the art installation shares these stories only in a type of
Hide-and-Seek game for the viewer. For deeper connections, the viewer
physically moves to a separate space to match the conceptual titles back to the
abstract squares. Through this physical movement and mindfulness, the
storyteller role shifts away from the artist and moves to the viewer to create
awareness, conversation, and the momentum for change.
September
10- October 12, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Gallery
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday,
Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Gallery |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Props: Personal Identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts, Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Props:
Personal identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts
The
term “props” brings to mind the objects used in the theater that help establish
the meaning of a scene. In this theater context, the word is shortened from
“properties,” things collectively owned by a theater group. But could the term
also reflect the notion that props show “properties” of a character, offering
layers of information and meaning to a viewer.? “Props” is also a slang term,
meaning “proper respect.” In this show, we analyze the props in photographic
portraits taken by RSR between 1920-1936 to see the way that the “props”—most
often objects chosen by the sitters themselves—tell us something about the
self-identity of the sitters. The objects chosen often underscore the proper
respect due the sitters based on their attainments, but also can give
insights—in an otherwise very formulaic genre—into the inner desires and
predilections of the sitters. Props thus can help us see beyond the surface,
or, perhaps conversely, can reify socially-agreed upon tropes.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (lower level)
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Southern Gothic: Literary Intersections w/Art from the Johnson Collection, Richardson Family Art Museum (upper level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
From the haunting novels of William
Faulkner to the gritty short stories of Flannery O'Connor, the Southern Gothic
literary tradition has exhumed and examined the American South’s unique
mystery, contradictions, and dark humor. Beginning in the mid-nineteenth
century, American writers, epitomized by Edgar Allan Poe and Nathaniel
Hawthorne, sought to reinterpret the Gothic imagination of their European
counterparts, dramatizing the cultures and characters of a region in the midst
of civil war and its tumultuous aftermath. Decades later, a new generation of
authors—including Tennessee Williams, Carson McCullers, and Toni Morrison—wove
Gothic elements into their own narratives, exploring the complexities of a changing
social terrain and the ancient spirits that linger in its corners.
With works drawn exclusively from the
Johnson Collection, Southern Gothic illuminates how nineteenth- and
twentieth-century artists employed a potent visual language to transcribe the
tensions between the South’s idyllic aura and its historical realities. Often
described as a mood or sensibility rather than a strict set of thematic or
technical conventions, features of the Southern Gothic can include horror,
romance, and the supernatural. While academic painters such as Charles Fraser
and Thomas Noble conveyed the genre’s gloomy tonalities in their canvases,
Aaron Douglas and Harry Hoffman grappled with the injustices of a modern world.
Other artists, including Alexander Brook and Eugene Thomason, investigated
prevailing stereotypes of rural Southerners—a trope often accentuated in
Southern Gothic literature. Collectively, these images demonstrate that
definitions of the Gothic are neither monolithic nor momentary, inviting us,
instead to contemplate how the Southern Gothic legacy continues to inform our
understanding of the American South.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (upper level) Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday - 1 - 5 p.m. Thursday - 1 - 9 p.m. Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (Upper Level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
4:30 PM - 5:00 PM
|
|
5:00 PM - 5:30 PM
|
|
5:30 PM - 6:00 PM
|
|
6:00 PM - 6:30 PM
|
|
6:30 PM
|
|
7:00 PM - 9:00 PM
|
|
8:30 PM - 9:00 PM
|
|
Wednesday, September 25, 2019
|
6:30 AM - 7:00 AM
|
|
(All Day)
|
Dental Interim, RMSC306
(Academic)
|
Description: |
If you are interested in registering for the interim project "An Introduction to Dental Medicine, please sign the list in the Chemistry Department. Only 8 students can register and you need an override to get in. Students must have a minimum gpa of 3.2. Preference will be given to juniors and seniors. Higher gpas and making your request known earlier will help your chances of getting an override.
|
Location: |
RMSC306 |
Contact: |
Dr. Charles Bass
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Otherness²: Hiding in Plain Sight by Lee Ann Harrison-Houser, Richardson Family Art Gallery
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Otherness²:
Hiding in Plain Sight explores the outsider’s perspectives and the impact of
“Othering.” During the creative process, Harrison-Houser pursues authenticity
and begins to reveal untold stories in her work. However, she instinctively
hides within the mark-making with her use of symbolism, sgraffito, and
abstraction. Layer after layer of gesso and paint erase her disclosures.
Subsequently, the art installation shares these stories only in a type of
Hide-and-Seek game for the viewer. For deeper connections, the viewer
physically moves to a separate space to match the conceptual titles back to the
abstract squares. Through this physical movement and mindfulness, the
storyteller role shifts away from the artist and moves to the viewer to create
awareness, conversation, and the momentum for change.
September
10- October 12, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Gallery
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday,
Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Gallery |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Props: Personal Identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts, Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Props:
Personal identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts
The
term “props” brings to mind the objects used in the theater that help establish
the meaning of a scene. In this theater context, the word is shortened from
“properties,” things collectively owned by a theater group. But could the term
also reflect the notion that props show “properties” of a character, offering
layers of information and meaning to a viewer.? “Props” is also a slang term,
meaning “proper respect.” In this show, we analyze the props in photographic
portraits taken by RSR between 1920-1936 to see the way that the “props”—most
often objects chosen by the sitters themselves—tell us something about the
self-identity of the sitters. The objects chosen often underscore the proper
respect due the sitters based on their attainments, but also can give
insights—in an otherwise very formulaic genre—into the inner desires and
predilections of the sitters. Props thus can help us see beyond the surface,
or, perhaps conversely, can reify socially-agreed upon tropes.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (lower level)
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Southern Gothic: Literary Intersection with Art from the Johnson Collection, Richardson Family Art Museum (upper level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
From the haunting novels of William
Faulkner to the gritty short stories of Flannery O'Connor, the Southern Gothic
literary tradition has exhumed and examined the American South’s unique
mystery, contradictions, and dark humor. Beginning in the mid-nineteenth
century, American writers, epitomized by Edgar Allan Poe and Nathaniel
Hawthorne, sought to reinterpret the Gothic imagination of their European
counterparts, dramatizing the cultures and characters of a region in the midst
of civil war and its tumultuous aftermath. Decades later, a new generation of
authors—including Tennessee Williams, Carson McCullers, and Toni Morrison—wove
Gothic elements into their own narratives, exploring the complexities of a changing
social terrain and the ancient spirits that linger in its corners.
With works drawn exclusively from the
Johnson Collection, Southern Gothic illuminates how nineteenth- and
twentieth-century artists employed a potent visual language to transcribe the
tensions between the South’s idyllic aura and its historical realities. Often
described as a mood or sensibility rather than a strict set of thematic or
technical conventions, features of the Southern Gothic can include horror,
romance, and the supernatural. While academic painters such as Charles Fraser
and Thomas Noble conveyed the genre’s gloomy tonalities in their canvases,
Aaron Douglas and Harry Hoffman grappled with the injustices of a modern world.
Other artists, including Alexander Brook and Eugene Thomason, investigated
prevailing stereotypes of rural Southerners—a trope often accentuated in
Southern Gothic literature. Collectively, these images demonstrate that
definitions of the Gothic are neither monolithic nor momentary, inviting us,
instead to contemplate how the Southern Gothic legacy continues to inform our
understanding of the American South.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (upper level) Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 - 5 p.m. Thursday: 1 - 9 p.m. Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (Upper Level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
4:30 PM - 5:30 PM
|
|
5:00 PM - 6:00 PM
|
Articulating the Study Abroad Experience, Space Conference Room
(Academic)
|
Description: |
Students who are interested in better defining skills gained from their study abroad experiences on their resumes, in job interviews and on graduate school applications should attend this workshop. Representatives from The Space and The Office of International Programs will discuss ways to better verbalize such experiences for both US and international potential employers and help students explore specific skills gained through study abroad. This info session is a must for all study abroad alums! Free food for student attendees!
|
Location: |
The Space Conference Room |
Contact: |
Office of International Programs
|
|
5:30 PM - 7:00 PM
|
Wofford German Club Oktoberfest, Burwell Dining Hall
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Come join the fun upstairs in Burwell to celebrate the Wofford German Club's annual campus-wide Oktoberfest! There will be authentic German food, German Oktoberfest music, decorations, and prizes!
Learn something about German culture and try some great food!
Meet German students from USC Upstate, Converse and local high schools!
|
Location: |
Burwell Upstairs |
Contact: |
Kirsten Krick-Aigner
|
|
6:00 PM - 6:30 PM
|
|
6:30 PM - 7:00 PM
|
|
7:00 PM - 7:30 PM
|
|
Thursday, September 26, 2019
|
11:00 AM - 1:00 PM
|
Learning to reduce microaggressions, Gray-Jones Room, Burwell Building
(Academic)
|
Description: |
Reducing microaggressions: From awareness to empowerment Giving Voice is a nationally recognized interactive theatre troupe that addresses various issues of diversity, oppression, and micro-aggressions. Under the direction of Dr. Carol Maples, the troupe uses an engaging approach to improve cultural competence in individuals and their organizations. Giving Voice guides the audience from awareness of oppression people are experiencing to empowerment so they can effectively handle various situations to help make their space safer for everyone. Thursday, Sep. 26 from 11 till 1pm in Gray Jones with lunch included, and Friday Sep. 27 from 11:30 till 2: 30pm in Meadors Multicultural House with complimentary lunch.
|
Location: |
Gray-Jones Room |
Contact: |
BEGONA CABALLERO
|
|
11:00 AM - 1:00 PM
|
Tasty Thursday, Seal of Main Building
(Student Life)
|
Description: |
Be the first in line to enjoy free food with One Love Fusion Food Truck. First 100 people in line receive will receive free food. Sponsored by Wofford Activities Council, Office of Diversity and Inclusion, Office of Fraternity and Sorority Life
|
Location: |
Seal of Main |
Contact: |
Nadia Glover
|
|
11:30 AM - 12:30 PM
|
|
11:45 AM - 1:00 PM
|
|
1:00 PM - 9:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Otherness²: Hiding in Plain Sight by Lee Ann Harrison-Houser, Richardson Family Art Gallery
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Otherness²:
Hiding in Plain Sight explores the outsider’s perspectives and the impact of
“Othering.” During the creative process, Harrison-Houser pursues authenticity
and begins to reveal untold stories in her work. However, she instinctively
hides within the mark-making with her use of symbolism, sgraffito, and
abstraction. Layer after layer of gesso and paint erase her disclosures.
Subsequently, the art installation shares these stories only in a type of
Hide-and-Seek game for the viewer. For deeper connections, the viewer
physically moves to a separate space to match the conceptual titles back to the
abstract squares. Through this physical movement and mindfulness, the
storyteller role shifts away from the artist and moves to the viewer to create
awareness, conversation, and the momentum for change.
September
10- October 12, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Gallery
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday,
Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Gallery |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 9:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Props: Personal Identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts, Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Props:
Personal identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts
The
term “props” brings to mind the objects used in the theater that help establish
the meaning of a scene. In this theater context, the word is shortened from
“properties,” things collectively owned by a theater group. But could the term
also reflect the notion that props show “properties” of a character, offering
layers of information and meaning to a viewer.? “Props” is also a slang term,
meaning “proper respect.” In this show, we analyze the props in photographic
portraits taken by RSR between 1920-1936 to see the way that the “props”—most
often objects chosen by the sitters themselves—tell us something about the
self-identity of the sitters. The objects chosen often underscore the proper
respect due the sitters based on their attainments, but also can give
insights—in an otherwise very formulaic genre—into the inner desires and
predilections of the sitters. Props thus can help us see beyond the surface,
or, perhaps conversely, can reify socially-agreed upon tropes.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (lower level)
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 9:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Southern Gothic: Literary Intersection with Art from the Johnson Collection, Richardson Family Art Museum (upper level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
From the haunting novels of William
Faulkner to the gritty short stories of Flannery O'Connor, the Southern Gothic
literary tradition has exhumed and examined the American South’s unique
mystery, contradictions, and dark humor. Beginning in the mid-nineteenth
century, American writers, epitomized by Edgar Allan Poe and Nathaniel
Hawthorne, sought to reinterpret the Gothic imagination of their European
counterparts, dramatizing the cultures and characters of a region in the midst
of civil war and its tumultuous aftermath. Decades later, a new generation of
authors—including Tennessee Williams, Carson McCullers, and Toni Morrison—wove
Gothic elements into their own narratives, exploring the complexities of a changing
social terrain and the ancient spirits that linger in its corners.
With works drawn exclusively from the
Johnson Collection, Southern Gothic illuminates how nineteenth- and
twentieth-century artists employed a potent visual language to transcribe the
tensions between the South’s idyllic aura and its historical realities. Often
described as a mood or sensibility rather than a strict set of thematic or
technical conventions, features of the Southern Gothic can include horror,
romance, and the supernatural. While academic painters such as Charles Fraser
and Thomas Noble conveyed the genre’s gloomy tonalities in their canvases,
Aaron Douglas and Harry Hoffman grappled with the injustices of a modern world.
Other artists, including Alexander Brook and Eugene Thomason, investigated
prevailing stereotypes of rural Southerners—a trope often accentuated in
Southern Gothic literature. Collectively, these images demonstrate that
definitions of the Gothic are neither monolithic nor momentary, inviting us,
instead to contemplate how the Southern Gothic legacy continues to inform our
understanding of the American South.
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (Upper Level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
4:30 PM - 5:00 PM
|
|
5:00 PM - 5:30 PM
|
|
5:30 PM - 6:00 PM
|
|
6:00 PM - 6:30 PM
|
|
8:00 PM - 11:00 PM
|
College Fest, Morgan Square in Downtown Spartanburg
(Student Life)
|
Description: |
Kick off the fall semester at College Fest, a free event welcoming college students into Downtown Spartanburg.
Enjoy a glow dance party with iPartyology, and try food and beverages by local restaurants.
Free food tickets and free t-shirts available to students with a valid college ID from Converse, SCC, Sherman, SMC, USC Upstate, VCOM & Wofford, while supplies last.
21+ beverages available for purchase with valid ID.
|
Location: |
Morgan Square in Downtown Spartanburg |
Contact: |
Alexa Riley
|
|
8:30 PM - 9:00 PM
|
|
Friday, September 27, 2019
|
11:30 AM - 2:30 PM
|
Reducing microaggressions: Interactive workshop, Meadors Multicultural House
(Academic)
|
Description: |
Giving
Voice, a nationally recognized interactive theatre troupe will lead a workshop that addresses
various issues of diversity, oppression, and micro-aggressions. Giving Voice guides
the audience from awareness of oppression people are experiencing to
empowerment, so they can effectively handle various situations to help make
their space safer for everyone. Complimentary lunch for all attendees. RSVPs are appreciated.
|
Location: |
Meadors Multicultural House |
Contact: |
Begona Caballero
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Otherness²: Hiding in Plain Sight by Lee Ann Harrison-Houser, Richardson Family Art Gallery
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Otherness²:
Hiding in Plain Sight explores the outsider’s perspectives and the impact of
“Othering.” During the creative process, Harrison-Houser pursues authenticity
and begins to reveal untold stories in her work. However, she instinctively
hides within the mark-making with her use of symbolism, sgraffito, and
abstraction. Layer after layer of gesso and paint erase her disclosures.
Subsequently, the art installation shares these stories only in a type of
Hide-and-Seek game for the viewer. For deeper connections, the viewer
physically moves to a separate space to match the conceptual titles back to the
abstract squares. Through this physical movement and mindfulness, the
storyteller role shifts away from the artist and moves to the viewer to create
awareness, conversation, and the momentum for change.
September
10- October 12, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Gallery
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday,
Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Gallery |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Props: Personal Identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts, Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Props:
Personal identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts
The
term “props” brings to mind the objects used in the theater that help establish
the meaning of a scene. In this theater context, the word is shortened from
“properties,” things collectively owned by a theater group. But could the term
also reflect the notion that props show “properties” of a character, offering
layers of information and meaning to a viewer.? “Props” is also a slang term,
meaning “proper respect.” In this show, we analyze the props in photographic
portraits taken by RSR between 1920-1936 to see the way that the “props”—most
often objects chosen by the sitters themselves—tell us something about the
self-identity of the sitters. The objects chosen often underscore the proper
respect due the sitters based on their attainments, but also can give
insights—in an otherwise very formulaic genre—into the inner desires and
predilections of the sitters. Props thus can help us see beyond the surface,
or, perhaps conversely, can reify socially-agreed upon tropes.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (lower level)
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Southern Gothic: Intersection of Art and Literature in the Johnson Collection, Richardson Family Art Museum (upper level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Southern
Gothic: Intersections of Art and Literature in the Johnson Collection
From Edgar
Allen Poe’s haunting tale of The Gold Bug (1843) to Flannery
O'Connor’s biting short story “Good Country People” (1955), the Southern
Gothic literary tradition has exhumed the American South’s aberrations,
contradictions, and unique sense of dark humor. Drawing exclusively
from the Johnson Collection, Southern Gothic examines how
nineteenth-and twentieth-century artists borrowed from their literary
peers, using a potent visual language to address the tensions between the
South’s idyllic visions and its historical realities.This exhibition is
guest curated by Elizabeth Driscoll Smith, a Ph.D. candidate from the
University California, Santa Barbara, and the Johnson Collection’s 2019
graduate fellow.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (upper level) Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday - 1 - 5 p.m. Thursdays - 1 - 9 p.m. Exhibit closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (Upper Level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
3:00 PM - 4:00 PM
|
|
4:00 PM - 4:30 PM
|
|
4:30 PM - 5:00 PM
|
|
5:00 PM - 5:30 PM
|
|
6:00 PM - 8:00 PM
|
|
Saturday, September 28, 2019
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Otherness²: Hiding in Plain Sight by Lee Ann Harrison-Houser, Richardson Family Art Gallery
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Otherness²:
Hiding in Plain Sight explores the outsider’s perspectives and the impact of
“Othering.” During the creative process, Harrison-Houser pursues authenticity
and begins to reveal untold stories in her work. However, she instinctively
hides within the mark-making with her use of symbolism, sgraffito, and
abstraction. Layer after layer of gesso and paint erase her disclosures.
Subsequently, the art installation shares these stories only in a type of
Hide-and-Seek game for the viewer. For deeper connections, the viewer
physically moves to a separate space to match the conceptual titles back to the
abstract squares. Through this physical movement and mindfulness, the
storyteller role shifts away from the artist and moves to the viewer to create
awareness, conversation, and the momentum for change.
September
10- October 12, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Gallery
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday,
Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Gallery |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Props: Personal Identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts, Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
Props:
Personal identities in the Portrait Photography of Richard Samuel Roberts
The
term “props” brings to mind the objects used in the theater that help establish
the meaning of a scene. In this theater context, the word is shortened from
“properties,” things collectively owned by a theater group. But could the term
also reflect the notion that props show “properties” of a character, offering
layers of information and meaning to a viewer.? “Props” is also a slang term,
meaning “proper respect.” In this show, we analyze the props in photographic
portraits taken by RSR between 1920-1936 to see the way that the “props”—most
often objects chosen by the sitters themselves—tell us something about the
self-identity of the sitters. The objects chosen often underscore the proper
respect due the sitters based on their attainments, but also can give
insights—in an otherwise very formulaic genre—into the inner desires and
predilections of the sitters. Props thus can help us see beyond the surface,
or, perhaps conversely, can reify socially-agreed upon tropes.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (lower level)
Exhibit Hours: Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 1 – 5 p.m.
Thursday: 1 – 9 p.m.
Closed on Sunday and Monday
|
Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (lower level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
|
|
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
|
Art Exhibit: Southern Gothic: Literary Intersection of Art from the Johnson Collection, Richardson Family Art Museum (upper level)
(Arts and Cultural (On Campus))
|
Description: |
From the haunting novels of William
Faulkner to the gritty short stories of Flannery O'Connor, the Southern Gothic
literary tradition has exhumed and examined the American South’s unique
mystery, contradictions, and dark humor. Beginning in the mid-nineteenth
century, American writers, epitomized by Edgar Allan Poe and Nathaniel
Hawthorne, sought to reinterpret the Gothic imagination of their European
counterparts, dramatizing the cultures and characters of a region in the midst
of civil war and its tumultuous aftermath. Decades later, a new generation of
authors—including Tennessee Williams, Carson McCullers, and Toni Morrison—wove
Gothic elements into their own narratives, exploring the complexities of a changing
social terrain and the ancient spirits that linger in its corners.
With works drawn exclusively from the
Johnson Collection, Southern Gothic illuminates how nineteenth- and
twentieth-century artists employed a potent visual language to transcribe the
tensions between the South’s idyllic aura and its historical realities. Often
described as a mood or sensibility rather than a strict set of thematic or
technical conventions, features of the Southern Gothic can include horror,
romance, and the supernatural. While academic painters such as Charles Fraser
and Thomas Noble conveyed the genre’s gloomy tonalities in their canvases,
Aaron Douglas and Harry Hoffman grappled with the injustices of a modern world.
Other artists, including Alexander Brook and Eugene Thomason, investigated
prevailing stereotypes of rural Southerners—a trope often accentuated in
Southern Gothic literature. Collectively, these images demonstrate that
definitions of the Gothic are neither monolithic nor momentary, inviting us,
instead to contemplate how the Southern Gothic legacy continues to inform our
understanding of the American South.
September 3 –
December 14, 2019
Richardson
Family Art Museum (upper level) Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday: 1 - 5 p.m. Thursday: 1 - 9 p.m. Closed on Sunday and Monday
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Location: |
Richardson Family Art Museum (Upper Level) |
Contact: |
Youmi Efurd
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6:00 PM - 8:00 PM
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Sunday, September 29, 2019
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5:00 PM - 5:30 PM
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5:30 PM - 6:00 PM
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Monday, September 30, 2019
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6:30 AM - 7:00 AM
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4:30 PM - 5:30 PM
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6:00 PM - 6:30 PM
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6:30 PM - 7:00 PM
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7:00 PM - 7:30 PM
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