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2015 Harvard ARTS FIRST Festival Guide

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The ARTS FIRST annual festival celebrates student and faculty creativity with hundreds of music, theater, dance, film and visual arts presentations at venues throughout Harvard University. Highlights include: 4/30 Harvard Arts Medal: Damian Woetzel MPA '07; 5/1 Jazz on the Plaza; 5/2 Harvard-Radcliffe Orchestra, 11 AM, Swan Lake: For the Birds!, 12 PM, Performance Fair, DanceFest on the Plaza, 1-5 PM; 5/3 Spring Forward with The Sloth storytelling hour and Eurydice Chamber Ensemble performing Aaron Copland’s Appalachian Spring, 1-2:30 PM. Most events are free. All events are open to the public.
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April 30–May 3, 2015 LITfest April 27-May 1
Transcript
Page 1: 2015 Harvard ARTS FIRST Festival Guide

April 30–May 3, 2015

LITfest April 27-May 1

Page 2: 2015 Harvard ARTS FIRST Festival Guide

Welcome to ARTS FIRST 2015, Harvard’s annual spring celebration of student and faculty creativity. We’re excited to bring you this four-day festival of performing and visual arts, which showcases the extraordinary range of artistic activity across the campus.

This year’s festival includes a stunning lineup of student and faculty works at a variety of venues including the beautiful open-air Plaza and the gloriously re-opened Harvard Art Museums. Highlights include LITfest, Arts Medal recipient Damian Woetzel, the Harvard Civil War Project, jazz compositions and improvisation from the class of Vijay Iyer, the Harvard-Radcliffe Orchestra performing

Dvořák under the baton of Maestro Federico Cortese, Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake like you’ve never seen it before and a Spring Forward storytelling lineup that will culminate in Aaron Copland’s Appalachian Spring. You can read about all of these and more in this guide.

Our goal is, as ever, to give our students and the greater Cambridge-Boston community the opportunity to experience the arts – as practitioners and audience members – during this concentrated annual extravaganza. Harvard’s year-round commitment to the arts is ever growing and includes the debut of a concentration in theater, dance and media, the expanded Harvard Ed Portal with a performance space and, with the renovation of Quincy and Leverett Houses, additional performance and art-making spaces.

This is a truly creative time to be at Harvard. And ARTS FIRST is our testament to the talent and promise of the arts in all our lives and in our world. We hope you have a wonderful time seeing art and making art with us this weekend.

John Lithgow ’67Master of the Arts at Harvard

Drew Gilpin FaustPresident, Harvard University

Rakesh Khurana AM ’97, PhD ‘98Dean, Harvard College

Morgan Chu ’76President, Harvard Board of Overseers

Jack MeganDirector, Office for the Arts at Harvard Producer, ARTS FIRST

John Lithgow ’67Master of the Arts at Harvard

Page 3: 2015 Harvard ARTS FIRST Festival Guide

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ParkingFREE PARKING FOR ARTS FIRST VISITORS on Saturday, May 2 from 10 am–6 pm, in Harvard’s Broadway Garage on Felton Street, off Cambridge Street, near Cambridge Rindge and Latin School. Other Parking Locations (for a fee): Charles Hotel Garage, Bennett Street Church Street Parking Lot, Church Street Harvard Square Parking Garage, Eliot Street Smith Campus Center Basement Garage, Holyoke Street University Place Parking, University Road

2–9 Festival HigHligHts

10–16 Festival at a glance PerFormance Fair and maP

17 general inFormation

18–21 Public art and visual arts

22–23 tHeater and music HigHligHts

24–26 sPecial tHanks and Festival credits

arts First 2015

More information and schedule updates

ofa.fas.harvard.edu/arts

#ARTSFIRSTTwitter @HarvardArts

Facebook Harvard ArtsInstagram @harvard_arts

Office for the Arts at Harvard: 617.495.8676

Venues are accessible, and events are suitable for children, unless otherwise noted.

Page 4: 2015 Harvard ARTS FIRST Festival Guide

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LITFEST Monday, April 27–Friday, May 1LITfest features internationally acclaimed authors and editors, readings of new work, panel discussions and hands-on workshops.

• Claudia Rankine, author of the National Book Award finalist Citizen: An American Lyric, reading and conversation co-sponsored by the Woodberry Poetry Room

• Emmy Award-winning creator, producer and writer of Mad Men, Matthew Weiner on the rise of literary television

• Conversation about the writing life with John Berendt ’61, author of Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil

• Panel on the narrative of medicine and illness with poet and editor Meghan O’Rourke (Radcliffe Institute), Suzanne Koven (Harvard Medical School), Arthur Kleinman (Anthropology and HMS) and Karen Thornber (Comparative Literature)

• Discussions and readings with alumni, students and faculty

• Creative writing workshops, including sessions on sijo with David McCann (Korea Foundation) and a hands-on experience with letterpress at Bow & Arrow Press

• Literary walking tour of Harvard campus and historical Cambridge with Daniel Berger-Jones

LITfest is produced by the Harvard Department of English, Office of the Dean of Arts and Humanities, Office for the Arts at Harvard, Woodberry Poetry Room and Harvard Writers at Work.

For full schedule, visit litfest.fas.harvard.edu

Page 5: 2015 Harvard ARTS FIRST Festival Guide

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HARVARD ARTS MEDAL CEREMONY

Damian Woetzel MPA '07, Dancer and Arts Leader Hosted by President Drew Gilpin Faust Conversation moderated by John Lithgow '67Thursday, April 30, 4 pm

Farkas HallAdmission free and open to the public, tickets required (limit two per person); available through the Harvard Box Office beginning April 21 for Harvard affiliates and April 23 for the public.

During more than two decades at New York City Ballet, Damian Woetzel was a virtuoso dancer who made the most complex moves look fun and, with his own stellar work, made an immense contribution to the world of dance. "Woetzel is power blasting through different orbits at once," wrote Dance Magazine. "The style, ebullience, clarity and commitment he showed onstage as a dancer at New York City Ballet has completely transferred to his activities offstage and behind the scenes."

A graduate of Harvard Kennedy School of Government and director of the Aspen Institute Arts Program and Harman Eisner Artist in Residence Program, Woetzel aims to further the value of the arts in society, focusing on education, social justice, economics and diplomacy.

“I always look for options that yield something unexpected,” Woetzel said in The New York Times. “What I crave is to get into these unique venues and make something that really hasn’t been done before, where people are without a net, and you have no idea what is going to happen. It’s the same for me, whether it’s the education work I do or the programming. That’s how you live. You participate. You take risks.”

Woetzel serves on the Kennedy Center Honors Artists Committee and the Knight Foundation National Arts Advisory Committee. He was a member of the Harvard University Task Force on the Arts, and he is on President Obama’s Committee on the Arts and Humanities.

The Harvard Arts Medal is given each year to a distinguished Harvard or Radcliffe graduate or faculty member who has achieved excellence in the arts and has made a contribution through the arts to education or the public good.

Page 6: 2015 Harvard ARTS FIRST Festival Guide

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ON THE PLAZA Welcome to the Plaza, an artistic crossroads for students, faculty and community to gather in celebration of the arts. All events on the Plaza are free and open to the public.

Friday

5:30-7 pm: Jazz on the PlazaEnjoy a jazz club ambiance under the Plaza tent. Music by the Harvard Jazz Band, with Don Braden ’85, conductor/tenor saxophonist. Special guests include Vijay Iyer and Ralph Peterson, Jr.

saturday

11 am: Dvořák's Cello Concerto in B minorHarvard-Radcliffe Orchestra performs Dvořák’s Cello Concerto in B minor, with soloist Sasha Scolnik-Brower ’17 and Maestro Federico Cortese. Enjoy the performance with coffee and pastries available for purchase onsite beginning at 10:30 am.

12 pm: Swan Lake: For the Birds!A transformative (and hilariously transformed!) event features scenes from Tchaikovsky’s famous ballet. With Hasty Pudding Theatricals, River Charles Ensemble, Harvard Ballet Company and a corps de ballet of Harvard faculty: Rakesh Khurana (Dean of Harvard College), Tom Dingman (Dean of Freshmen) and distinguished professors Steven Pinker, Diana Eck and others! Hosted by Harvard’s Master of the Arts John Lithgow ’67, intrepidly assisted by the Harvard University Band.

12:30 pm: Welcome from John Lithgow ’67

1-5 pm: Global Arts on the PlazaA lineup of international performances including mariachi, jazz, traditional Chinese music, Korean hip hop, Irish step dancing, dabke, breakdancing, Gilbert & Sullivan and much more. See pull-out schedule at center of guide for Performance Fair details.

sunday

1 pm: Spring Forward: Stories and Music for a New SeasonThe Sloth, Harvard’s live storytelling hour, presents six storytellers, each with seven minutes, no notes and (mostly true) tales on the theme of “spring.” Created by Deborah Foster (Senior Lecturer on Folklore and Mythology), Jacob Barton ’17 and Emily Warshaw GSE ’15. The afternoon culminates in a performance of Aaron Copland’s Appalachian Spring by the Eurydice Chamber Ensemble.

9 pm: WhiplashHailed as “spellbinding” by The New York Times and winner of three Academy Awards, Whiplash, written and directed by Damien Chazelle ’08, tells the story of a determined student jazz drummer and his power struggle with an abusive conservatory band director. Enjoy this outdoor screening of a gripping film with Harvard ties. Free popcorn and drinks. Sponsored by the Office of the President.

Page 7: 2015 Harvard ARTS FIRST Festival Guide

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MAKE ART Look for white tents and join art making with students and staff on the Plaza. Photography, ceramics, theatricals and more will awaken and engage the artist in you. Saturday 1-5 pm

Living Sculpture Join instructor Allison Newsome and sculpture students from the OFA Ceramics Program for live figure demonstrations celebrating the Harvard Art Museums' work that inspires them.

Scan, Touch, PlayDevelop kinesthetic and sensory awareness through playful movement activities. Ilya Vidrin GSE '15.

Snapshots: A Study of Metamorphosis in Art Have your picture taken and answer: How has art transformed you? Snapshots will be pieced together to form a composite whole face representing the diversity of the community. Presented by Harvard College Art Society: Pamela Chen ‘16, Sam Wattrus ‘16, Ariana Kam ’16 and Catherine Li ’18.

Wheel ThrowingTry your hand at creating a masterpiece. Join artists for demonstrations using the pottery wheel and sculpting with clay.

Your Solo Is Waiting – Get in on the DramaShare the limelight with actors from Hyperion Shakespeare Company. Grab a script and play the lead!

J.K. Simmons (left) and Miles Teller in Whiplash, the Academy Award-winning film directed by Damien Chazelle '08. Photo courtesy Sony Pictures Classics. See it Sunday night on the Plaza.

Page 8: 2015 Harvard ARTS FIRST Festival Guide

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HARVARD ART MUSEUMS Discover the rich collections of the Fogg, Busch-Reisinger and Arthur M. Sackler Museums, newly united in a state-of-the-art facility designed by Renzo Piano Building Workshop. Encounter works from the ancient world to the present, and from the Americas, Europe, North Africa, the Mediterranean and Asia in the revitalized Calderwood Courtyard and galleries. Visit the Lightbox Gallery to explore the intersection of art and technology, and return to attend a lecture, performance or film. The renowned collections and unique spaces inspire new ways of looking and thinking about art for all visitors.

32 Quincy Street, Cambridge, MA 02138 617.495.9400 | harvardartmuseums.org Open daily 10 am–5 pm | See website for ticket information.

Free admission Saturday, May 2.

Harvard art museums HigHligHts

Mark Rothko’s Harvard MuralsA new presentation of Rothko’s 1962 murals commissioned by Harvard University features an innovative, noninvasive digital projection conservation approach.

Rebecca Horn: Work in ProgressA select group of the artist’s multiples, photographs and paintings explores her work as constantly building on itself and drawing from earlier inspiration and production.

Tours by Student GuidesFriday 2 pm, Saturday-Sunday 11 am

Tours by Harvard undergraduates focus on a small number of objects and provide visitors with a unique view of the building and collections. Each tour is limited to 15 visitors; multiple tours are offered for each time. Meet in the Museums’ courtyard, in front of the LCD screens. Free with museums admission.

The Harvard Art Museums. Photo: Nic Lehoux.

Interior of the new Harvard Art Museums. Photo: Nic Lehoux

Page 9: 2015 Harvard ARTS FIRST Festival Guide

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arts First HigHligHts

Red by John LoganFriday 7 pm (Harvard student premiere. Free and open to all Harvard students, WitH open galleries to FolloW For attendees. tickets: Harvard Box oFFice); Saturday & Sunday 1 pm (Free and open to tHe puBlic. seating is First-come, First-served.)Red, John Logan’s play about painter Mark Rothko, explores the boundaries of art and apprenticeship. Staged in conjunction with the Museums' special exhibition, Mark Rothko's Harvard Murals. Directed by Max McGillivray ’16, produced by Andrew Gelfand ’15 and Megan Jones ’16. 90 minutes. Red contains adult themes and language and is appropriate for ages 14 and older. Harvard Art Museums’ Menschel Hall, Lower Level 32 Quincy St. Please use entrance on Broadway.

Performance Fair in the Calderwood Courtyard Saturday 3-4:50 pm

Hear chamber and choral music during student Performance Fair concerts. For details, see pull-out schedule at center of guide. Free.

Adolphus Busch HallGallery hours Saturday 10 am–1 pm arts First perFormance Fair 1–5 pm

Part of the Harvard Art Museums, Adolphus Busch Hall houses the Busch-Reisinger Museum founding collection of plaster casts of medieval art and, in addition to hosting public programs and performances, is open to the public on Wednesdays, 1-5 pm and Saturdays, 10 am-1 pm. Busch Hall hosts student events during the Performance Fair on Saturday, May 2, 1–5 pm. For details, see pull-out schedule at center of guide. Free. 29 Kirkland St.

Mark Rothko’s Panel One (Harvard Mural Triptych) © 2014 Kate Rothko Prizel and Christopher Rothko/Artists Rights Society, New York.

Page 10: 2015 Harvard ARTS FIRST Festival Guide

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HARVARD CIVIL WAR PROJECT Harvard Civil War Project is a multidisciplinary arts and academic series—including concerts, theatrical performances, panels, lectures, public art, exhibitions, gallery talks, academic coursework and public conversations presented by more than 10 Harvard affiliated departments—addressing the impact and meaning of America’s historic conflict.

The greatest crisis in our nation’s history, the American Civil War still reverberates today. This historical watershed, its aftermath and its contemporary resonances are the focus of HCWP, which was inspired by the National Civil War Project and the 150th anniversary of the war’s conclusion.

“The Harvard Civil War Project draws on the remarkable academic and creative strengths that exist across the University to consider the significance, past and present of a great milestone in American history,” said Drew Gilpin Faust, president of Harvard University and a historian of the Civil War and the American South. “It supports new insight into our nation's experience of the war and advances the still-unfinished work of creating a more perfect union.”

Throughout the spring, HCWP participants have explored the complex, contested meanings and outcomes of the war. The events during ARTS FIRST continue the discussion.

A visitor interacts with Deep Wounds in Memorial Hall. Photo: Kris Snibbe.

Page 11: 2015 Harvard ARTS FIRST Festival Guide

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Deep WoundsMonday-Friday 10 am-6 pm, Saturday-Sunday 12-6 pm

An explorer of the “soul” in technology, artist Brian Knep has created a large-scale digital/video installation that weds this pursuit with psychological inquiry. Deep Wounds draws on the architectural and historical context of Memorial Hall—built to honor Harvard alumni who fought for the Union in the American Civil War—to consider the universal and complex challenges of conflict, transgression and reconciliation. Commissioned by the Office for the Arts Public Art Program, Deep Wounds is free and open to the public. Runs through Thursday, May 7; closed April 19.Memorial Hall, 45 Quincy St.

Memory’s Keeping: David Lang’s Battle HymnsHarvard Dance Project (Jill Johnson, Artistic Director), Harvard-Radcliffe Collegium Musicum (Andrew Clark, Conductor) and Boston Children’s Chorus (Anthony Trecek-King, Artistic Director) Saturday 8 pm This New England premiere of Battle Hymns by the Pulitzer Prize-winning composer David Lang is a collage of texts about war: a speech of Abraham Lincoln, parlor songs of Stephen Foster and a soldier’s letter to his wife. The performance also features the premiere of a new work from Harvard’s inaugural student choral composition competition: a setting of Oliver Wendell Holmes’ Hymn, written for the Memorial Hall cornerstone laying ceremony in 1870. Sanders Theatre, Memorial Hall, 45 Quincy St. Tickets: Harvard Box Office, Smith Center, 1340 Massachusetts Ave. 617.496.2222 | boxoffice.harvard.edu

A Heartrending Cry: Dona Nobis Pacem by Ralph Vaughan WilliamsHarvard-Radcliffe Chorus (Edward Elwyn Jones, Artistic Director) Sunday 4 pm Vaughan Williams' Dona Nobis Pacem, written in 1936, made an uplifting plea for peace and sounded a fervent warning at a time when Europe was moving toward another catastrophic war. Three Walt Whitman poems are framed by words from the Latin Mass, the Old Testament and John Bright’s famous House of Commons speech during the Crimean War. The concert also includes William Schuman’s A Free Song, which was awarded the first Pulitzer Prize in music in 1943. Sanders Theatre, Memorial Hall, 45 Quincy St. Tickets: Harvard Box Office

Page 12: 2015 Harvard ARTS FIRST Festival Guide

10Harvard Ballet Company

Page 13: 2015 Harvard ARTS FIRST Festival Guide

11

APRIL 30–MAY 3, 2015

For updates and event details visitofa.fas.harvard.edu/arts

Events are free and open to the public unless otherwise noted.

Festival at a Glance

including

Saturday Performance Fair

& Map

Page 14: 2015 Harvard ARTS FIRST Festival Guide

12

4–5 pm 5–6 pm

Farkas Hall

10-12 Holyoke St.

Harvard Arts Medal Ceremony honors dancer and arts leader

Damian Woetzel MPA ‘07See page 3.

Free tickets: Harvard Box Office

graFton street Pub & grill

1230 Massachusetts Ave.

Harvardwood ReceptionARTS FIRST celebration with

Boston members of Harvardwood For Harvard community only

5-7 pm

memorial Hall

45 Quincy St.

Deep Wounds Inspired by Memorial Hall, this site-specific installation by

artist Brian Knep explores the universal challenge of unfinished healing and reconciliation. Part of the Harvard Civil War Project.

10 am-6 pm See pages 8-9.

7-8 pm 8–9 pm 9–10 pm

agassiz tHeatre

10 Garden St.

Jake's WomenComedy by Neil Simon

Tickets: Harvard Box Office

Farkas Hall

10-12 Holyoke St.

BacheloretteComedy by Leslye HeadlandTickets: Harvard Box Office

Harvard art museums' menscHel Hall

32 Quincy St.

RedPlay by John Logan

In conjunction with the Rothko exhibit at Harvard Art Museums.

See pages 6-7.This performance is for Harvard

students only.

Open GalleriesFor attendees of the preceding

performance of Red only

Harvard Film arcHive

24 Quincy St.VES Film/Video and Animation Screenings

leverett library tHeater

28 Dewolfe St.

Two Girls and a GuyRomantic drama by James Toback '66 Free. Tickets: [email protected]

loeb ex tHeater

64 Brattle St.

EndgamePlay by Samuel Beckett

Free. Tickets: [email protected]

loeb mainstage

64 Brattle St.

MiddletownPlay by Will Eno

Tickets: Harvard Box Office & Loeb Box Office

lowell lecture Hall

Kirkland & Quincy Sts.

Music from Phantom of the Opera

Harvard Pops Orchestra Tickets: Harvard Box Office

memorial cHurcH

Harvard Yard

AthaliaHarvard University Choir and Harvard

Baroque Chamber Orchestra perform Handel's oratorio

widener library stePs

Harvard Yard

Memory Library

See page 18.

3–4 pm 4–5 pm 5–6 pm 6–7 pm

carPenter center

24 Quincy St.

VES Thesis Exhibition Opening

Reception

VES Open StudiosFive floors of work from VES studio art and photography

courses. See page 20.

memorial Hall

45 Quincy St.Deep Wounds

10 am-6 pm. See pages 8-9.

Peabody museum oF arcHaeology & etHnology

11 Divinity Ave.

Musical Hues

Dudley World Music Ensemble

plays in the galleries; you

draw. Art supplies available.

tHe Plaza

See page 4

Jazz on the Plaza

Harvard Jazz Band, Don Braden '85

and special guests including Vijay Iyer and

Ralph Peterson, Jr.

socH/Hilles

5th floor 59 Shepard St.

IGP Dinner PartyImprov +

dinner Free. Tickets:

[email protected]

6-7 pm 7-8 pm 8–9 pm 9–10 pm

adams House arts sPace

10 Linden St.

Adams House Klezmer BandA 3-hour Klezmerpalooza offers Eastern European

Jewish folk/dance music

agassiz tHeatre

10 Garden St.

Jake's WomenComedy by Neil Simon

Tickets: Harvard Box Office

Farkas Hall

10-12 Holyoke St.

BacheloretteComedy by Leslye HeadlandTickets: Harvard Box Office

Harvard Film arcHive

24 Quincy St.

VES Film/Video and Animation Screenings1-4 pm & 7-10 pm

knaFel center cgis nortH

1737 Cambridge St.

Harvard Student Art Show Opening

Original artwork from Harvard graduate and undergraduate

student artists See page 20.

leverett library tHeater

28 Dewolfe St.

Two Girls and a Guy

Romantic drama by James Toback '66 Free. Tickets: [email protected]

loeb mainstage

64 Brattle St.

MiddletownPlay by Will Eno

Tickets: Harvard Box Office & Loeb Box Office

THURSDAY

MORE PERFORMANCE DETAILS

Visual Arts and Public Art: 18-21Theater: 22Music: 23

Plaza highlights in yellow: 4-5

Full descriptions of all events, including participants and up-to-the-minute repertoire: ofa.fas.harvard.edu/arts

Page 15: 2015 Harvard ARTS FIRST Festival Guide

13

4–5 pm 5–6 pm

Farkas Hall

10-12 Holyoke St.

Harvard Arts Medal Ceremony honors dancer and arts leader

Damian Woetzel MPA ‘07See page 3.

Free tickets: Harvard Box Office

graFton street Pub & grill

1230 Massachusetts Ave.

Harvardwood ReceptionARTS FIRST celebration with

Boston members of Harvardwood For Harvard community only

5-7 pm

memorial Hall

45 Quincy St.

Deep Wounds Inspired by Memorial Hall, this site-specific installation by

artist Brian Knep explores the universal challenge of unfinished healing and reconciliation. Part of the Harvard Civil War Project.

10 am-6 pm See pages 8-9.

7-8 pm 8–9 pm 9–10 pm

agassiz tHeatre

10 Garden St.

Jake's WomenComedy by Neil Simon

Tickets: Harvard Box Office

Farkas Hall

10-12 Holyoke St.

BacheloretteComedy by Leslye HeadlandTickets: Harvard Box Office

Harvard art museums' menscHel Hall

32 Quincy St.

RedPlay by John Logan

In conjunction with the Rothko exhibit at Harvard Art Museums.

See pages 6-7.This performance is for Harvard

students only.

Open GalleriesFor attendees of the preceding

performance of Red only

Harvard Film arcHive

24 Quincy St.VES Film/Video and Animation Screenings

leverett library tHeater

28 Dewolfe St.

Two Girls and a GuyRomantic drama by James Toback '66 Free. Tickets: [email protected]

loeb ex tHeater

64 Brattle St.

EndgamePlay by Samuel Beckett

Free. Tickets: [email protected]

loeb mainstage

64 Brattle St.

MiddletownPlay by Will Eno

Tickets: Harvard Box Office & Loeb Box Office

lowell lecture Hall

Kirkland & Quincy Sts.

Phantom of the Opera silent movie

with live orchestral accompaniment by the Harvard Pops

Tickets: Harvard Box Office

memorial cHurcH

Harvard Yard

AthaliaHarvard University Choir and Harvard

Baroque Chamber Orchestra perform Handel's oratorio

widener library stePs

Harvard Yard

Memory Library

See page 18.

3–4 pm 4–5 pm 5–6 pm 6–7 pm

carPenter center

24 Quincy St.

VES Thesis Exhibition Opening

Reception

VES Open StudiosFive floors of work from VES studio art and photography

courses. See page 20.

memorial Hall

45 Quincy St.Deep Wounds

10 am-6 pm. See pages 8-9.

Peabody museum oF arcHaeology & etHnology

11 Divinity Ave.

Musical Hues

Dudley World Music Ensemble

plays in the galleries; you

draw. Art supplies available.

tHe Plaza

See page 4

Jazz on the Plaza

Harvard Jazz Band, Don Braden '85

and special guests including Vijay Iyer and

Ralph Peterson, Jr.

socH/Hilles

5th floor 59 Shepard St.

IGP Dinner PartyImprov +

dinner Free. Tickets:

[email protected]

FRIDAY

Page 16: 2015 Harvard ARTS FIRST Festival Guide

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11 am–12 pm 12–1 pm

east asian lang. ctr. 5 Bryant St.

Japanese Tea Ceremony10-11 am, 11:15 am-12:15 pm, 12:30-1:30 pm

$10 at the event

sunken garden

Radcliffe Yard

Sunken Garden Children’s Theater

Performance 1 Performance 2

tHe Plaza

See page 4

Performance Fair Opening Events

Harvard-Radcliffe Orchestra

Dvořák’s Cello Concerto in B minor

Swan Lake: For the Birds!Hasty Pudding Theatricals, River Charles Ensemble, Harvard Ballet

Company and Harvard faculty, hosted by John Lithgow ’67 with Harvard

Marching Band

1–2 pm 2-3 pm 3-4 pm 4-5 pm

in & around Harvard yard

Performance FairAn exciting lineup of live music, dance and theater by more than 100 student

arts groups in 11 locations. See pull-out grid on next page.

Harvard dance center

60 Garden St.

American Girl Book ClubParticipatory dance demo with Harvard

Ballet Company

memorial Hall

Deep Wounds12-6 pm. See pages 8-9.

Peabody museum

11 Divinity Ave.

Student- led ToursSee page 21.

Student-led ToursSee page 21.

tHe Plaza Make Art Stations Join the fun. See page 5.

socH/Hilles

5th floor 59 Shepard St.

Harmony One-on-OneMusic recital by local students of Phillips Brooks House affiliates

7-8 pm 8–9 pm 9–10 pm

agassiz tHeatre

10 Garden St.

Jake's WomenComedy by Neil Simon

Tickets: Harvard Box Office

Farkas Hall

10-12 Holyoke St.

BacheloretteComedy by Leslye HeadlandTickets: Harvard Box Office

Harvard Film arcHive

24 Quincy St.VES Film/Video and Animation Screenings

leverett library tHeater

28 Dewolfe St.

Two Girls and a GuyRomantic drama by James Toback '66 Free. Tickets: [email protected]

loeb ex tHeater

64 Brattle St.

EndgamePlay by Samuel Beckett

Free. Tickets: [email protected]

loeb mainstage

64 Brattle St.

MiddletownPlay by Will Eno

Tickets: Harvard Box Office & Loeb Box Office

Paine Hall

Behind Science Center

Bach Society Orchestra: Works by Pärt, Mendelssohn and more

Tickets: Harvard Box Office

sanders tHeatre

45 Quincy St.

Memory’s Keeping: David Lang’s Battle Hymns

Harvard Dance Project, Harvard-Radcliffe Collegium Musicum and Boston Children’s

Chorus. See pages 8-9. Tickets: Harvard Box Office

widener library stePs

Harvard Yard

Memory Library

See page 18.

1–2 pm 2–3 pm 3–4 pm

agassiz tHeatre

10 Garden St.

Jake's WomenComedy by Neil Simon

Tickets: Harvard Box Office

Farkas Hall

10-12 Holyoke St.

BacheloretteComedy by Leslye Headland. Tickets: Harvard Box Office

Harvard art museums' menscHel Hall

32 Quincy St.

RedPlay by John Logan

Free and open to the public See pages 6-7.

lowell House courtyard

10 Holyoke Pl. (Use entryway F just past front gate)

Russian Bell-Ringing

Concert

1812 OvertureTchaikovsky’s

1812 with kazoos, cannons and bells

matHer House

Senior Common Room 10 Holyoke Pl.

Chamber music

Baroque to modern

memorial Hall

45 Quincy St.Deep Wounds

12-6 pm. See pages 8-9.

Peabody museum

11 Divinity Ave.

Student- led ToursSee page 21.

Student- led ToursSee page 21.

tHe Plaza

See page 4

Spring Forward: Stories and Music for a

New Season The Sloth storytelling hour and

performance of Aaron Copland’s Appalachian Spring by the

Eurydice Chamber Ensemble

radcliFFe yard

10 Garden St.25th Annual Powwow

Native American drumming, dancing and performances

sever Hall 101Harvard Yard

Crunch Comics Workshop

Collaborate on an epic comic book

socH/Hilles

5th floor 59 Shepard St.

Arjuna's MeditationShadow puppet play with gamelan music directed by Jody Diamond. See page 23.

sunken garden

Radcliffe Yard

Sunken Garden Children’s Theater

12 pm & 1 pm

7–8 pm 8–9 pm 9–10 pm

loeb ex tHeater

64 Brattle St.

EndgamePlay by Samuel Beckett

Free. Tickets: [email protected]

tHe Plaza

See page 4

WhiplashOutdoor screening of Academy Award-winning film written

and directed by Damien Chazelle '08

9-10:45 pm

sanders tHeatre

45 Quincy St.

Dudley World Music

OrchestraTickets: Harvard

Box Office

4–5 pm 5–6 pm

lowell House

Junior Common Room 10 Holyoke Pl.

ArtPlay by Yasmina Reza

Free. Tickets: [email protected]:30 pm

sanders tHeatre

45 Quincy St.

A Heartrending Cry: Dona Nobis Pacem by Ralph Vaughan Williams

Harvard-Radcliffe Chorus. See pages 8-9.

SATURDAY

Page 17: 2015 Harvard ARTS FIRST Festival Guide

15

11 am–12 pm 12–1 pm

east asian lang. ctr. 5 Bryant St.

Japanese Tea Ceremony10-11 am, 11:15 am-12:15 pm, 12:30-1:30 pm

$10 at the event

sunken garden

Radcliffe Yard

Sunken Garden Children’s Theater

Performance 1 Performance 2

tHe Plaza

See page 4

Performance Fair Opening Events

Harvard-Radcliffe Orchestra

Dvořák’s Cello Concerto in B minor

Swan Lake: For the Birds!Hasty Pudding Theatricals, River Charles Ensemble, Harvard Ballet

Company and Harvard faculty, hosted by John Lithgow ’67 with Harvard

Marching Band

7-8 pm 8–9 pm 9–10 pm

agassiz tHeatre

10 Garden St.

Jake's WomenComedy by Neil Simon

Tickets: Harvard Box Office

Farkas Hall

10-12 Holyoke St.

BacheloretteComedy by Leslye HeadlandTickets: Harvard Box Office

Harvard Film arcHive

24 Quincy St.VES Film/Video and Animation Screenings

leverett library tHeater

28 Dewolfe St.

Two Girls and a GuyRomantic drama by James Toback '66 Free. Tickets: [email protected]

loeb ex tHeater

64 Brattle St.

EndgamePlay by Samuel Beckett

Free. Tickets: [email protected]

loeb mainstage

64 Brattle St.

MiddletownPlay by Will Eno

Tickets: Harvard Box Office & Loeb Box Office

Paine Hall

Behind Science Center

Bach Society Orchestra: Works by Pärt, Mendelssohn and more

Tickets: Harvard Box Office

sanders tHeatre

45 Quincy St.

Memory’s Keeping: David Lang’s Battle Hymns

Harvard Dance Project, Harvard-Radcliffe Collegium Musicum and Boston Children’s

Chorus. See pages 8-9. Tickets: Harvard Box Office

widener library stePs

Harvard Yard

Memory Library

See page 18.

1–2 pm 2–3 pm 3–4 pm

agassiz tHeatre

10 Garden St.

Jake's WomenComedy by Neil Simon

Tickets: Harvard Box Office

Farkas Hall

10-12 Holyoke St.

BacheloretteComedy by Leslye Headland. Tickets: Harvard Box Office

Harvard art museums' menscHel Hall

32 Quincy St.

RedPlay by John Logan

Free and open to the public See pages 6-7.

lowell House courtyard

10 Holyoke Pl. (Use entryway F just past front gate)

Russian Bell-Ringing

Concert

1812 OvertureTchaikovsky’s

1812 with kazoos, cannons and bells

matHer House

Senior Common Room 10 Holyoke Pl.

Chamber music

Baroque to modern

memorial Hall

45 Quincy St.Deep Wounds

12-6 pm. See pages 8-9.

Peabody museum

11 Divinity Ave.

Student- led ToursSee page 21.

Student- led ToursSee page 21.

tHe Plaza

See page 4

Spring Forward: Stories and Music for a

New Season The Sloth storytelling hour and

performance of Aaron Copland’s Appalachian Spring by the

Eurydice Chamber Ensemble

radcliFFe yard

10 Garden St.25th Annual Powwow

Native American drumming, dancing and performances

sever Hall 101Harvard Yard

Crunch Comics Workshop

Collaborate on an epic comic book

socH/Hilles

5th floor 59 Shepard St.

Arjuna's MeditationShadow puppet play with gamelan music directed by Jody Diamond. See page 23.

sunken garden

Radcliffe Yard

Sunken Garden Children’s Theater

12 pm & 1 pm

7–8 pm 8–9 pm 9–10 pm

loeb ex tHeater

64 Brattle St.

EndgamePlay by Samuel Beckett

Free. Tickets: [email protected]

tHe Plaza

See page 4

WhiplashOutdoor screening of Academy Award-winning film written

and directed by Damien Chazelle '08

9-10:45 pm

sanders tHeatre

45 Quincy St.

Dudley World Music

OrchestraTickets: Harvard

Box Office

4–5 pm 5–6 pm

lowell House

Junior Common Room 10 Holyoke Pl.

ArtPlay by Yasmina Reza

Free. Tickets: [email protected]:30 pm

sanders tHeatre

45 Quincy St.

A Heartrending Cry: Dona Nobis Pacem by Ralph Vaughan Williams

Harvard-Radcliffe Chorus. See pages 8-9.

SUNDAY

Page 18: 2015 Harvard ARTS FIRST Festival Guide

16 17 18

1:00-1:20 1:30-1:50 2:00-2:20 2:30-2:50 3:00-3:20 3:30-3:50 4:00-4:20 4:30-4:50

grace notesadolPHus buscH Hall

27 Kirkland St.

The Dudley Consort Sings12-voice Renaissance

polyphony

Mather Chamber Music

Classical violin duet Whitney Thornburg '15

Annika Gompers '18

Harvard Organ Society A recital

Camerata Obscura: Songs of

War and PeaceSacred and secular polyphony of the

Renaissance

VoxJazzSpring showcase by

six-person co-ed vocal jazz ensemble

The Lambda Singers

Early vocal chamber musicperformed a cappella

Jauchzet Gott in allen Landen, BWV 51.

Bach Cantata BWV 82 “Ich habe genug.” Harvard Early

Music Society featuring Charlotte McKechnie ‘15

amped upcambridge Queen’s Head Pub

Basement, Memorial Hall Kirkland & Quincy Sts.

Burne HolidayRockalicious originals and

covers

Harvard Soul Jazz QuintetSweet soul music for grooving

There's a Rap for That

Harvard Rap Collective spitting over classic and

original beats

The SolarsThrowback folk-rock with big harmonies and riffy

riffiness

Dudley House JazzOriginal jazz arrangements

and tunes

Jocelyn Arndt '17Indie rock and blues band

with a soulful vocalist

The Lighthouse Keepers

Covers and originals in a mixture of indie, folk and

pop

soundings For a neW spaceHarvard art museums

32 Quincy St.

menscHel Hall, lower level calderwood courtyard

RedJohn Logan’s play about painter Mark Rothko explores the boundaries of art and apprenticeship.

Staged in conjunction with the Museums' current special exhibition, Mark Rothko's Harvard Murals. 90 minutes. Red contains adult themes and language and is appropriate for ages 14 and older.

Free and open to the public

New Works for a New MuseumTwo chamber works

inspired by the Harvard Art Museums.

Sean Rodan '17, Sam Wu '17, composers

Bach, Beethoven, and Schumann

Emma Frucht '17, George Meyer 15, Stella Chen '15, Sasha Scolnik-Brower '17,

Sophie Scolnik-Brower ‘12

Choral Music at the Calderwood:

Harvard Glee Club & Radcliffe Choral Society

American composers and folk traditions

creative music in motionHolden cHaPel

Harvard Yard

Original compositions and improvisations by students and guests of Professor Vijay Iyer

Tree Palmedo '16, trumpetAlex Graff '17, guitar

Chase Morrin '15/NEC '16, piano; JK Kim (Berklee),

drums; Jonathan Chapman (Berklee), bass

Performing as Spicy Hot Jazz

Chase Morrin '15/NEC '16, piano; George Meyer '15, viola; Carlos Snaider '17, guitar;

Garrett Parrish MIT '17, drums; Eden Girma '18, voice

Ensembles from Music 173r: Gabe Gladstein '17, Caetano Hanta-Davis '18, Tamara Jafar (GSD), Anand Krishnamurthy (GSAS), Jacob Lurye '18, Ryan

Park-Chan '18, Jonah Philion '18, Aditya Raguram '18, Rose Whitcomb '16, Anya Yermakova (GSAS)

Special faculty performance with guests

classical reFlectionsmemorial cHurcH main sanctuary

Harvard Yard

Choral Fellows of the Harvard

University ChoirChoral music from

Renaissance to contemporary

Brattle Street Chamber Players Concerto for Two Violins in D minor, BWV 1043 by

J.S. Bach

Sitan Chen '16: Chopin's Op. 28 PreludesFor solo piano

George Ko '16: Music from ParisDebussy’s Suite Bergamasque, selections from Chopin

Schubert's Death and the

MaidenMather String Quartet

Schubert's Die Winterreise

Song CycleAmir Bitran '16

Frederick Metzger '18

uniquely american soundPaine Hall

Behind Science Center

The Corn KnightChase Morrin '15/NEC '16,

pianoYaniv Yacoby '15, marimba

Ripples of ThoughtNew works for voice and

ensemble on the relationship between words and music Jake Wilder-Smith '16,

composer

Bean + SoupJazz/soul standards and

original numbers Josh Bean ‘16

Joshuah Campbell ’16

Alex + JamesJazz, R&B and neo-soul

medley for guitar and voice Alex Graff ’17

James Ramsey '15

Selections: Porgy and Bess, and

As Thousands CheerAsia Stewart '18

Tania Rivers-Moore '15

Harvard Piano Society: An

American Adventure Solo and four-hand

piano works by American composers

Kate Diaz '19Pop acoustic

singer/songwriter, guitar

Noteables Show choir performing

numbers from musical theater and cinema

Folk and FunPHilliPs brooks House

The Parlor, Harvard Yard

Veri and RobVoice, piano, ukulele,

guitar Veri Seo '15

Rob Dei Dolori '17

RecKlezHarvard Hillel's Klezmer

Band

Spring BandAcoustic alternative songs

Zoe Kessler '17 Adam Jiang '17

Stephanie Johnson '18

Cover songs for solo piano

Three Letter Acronym

Long form improv comedy

On Thin IceShort-form, unscripted

improv comedy

Harvard College Stand-Up Society

Content may not be appropriate for children

On Harvard Time Comedy News

Joe Tabasco '15 Karen Chee '17

gloBal arts Plaza tent

In front of the Science Center

Mariachi Veritas Showcase

Traditional Mexican folk music

Rhythm Section Bros

Conventional jazz featuring the Harvard Jazz

Band rhythm section

Chinese Music Ensemble

Chinese folk and pop songs using traditional Chinese instruments

Laughter & Light Opera: A Gilbert & Sullivan Sampler

Harvard-Radcliffe Gilbert & Sullivan Players

DanceFest

Pan-African Dance and Music Ensemble, Expressions Dance Company, Ghungroo Senior Boys, Asian American Dance Troupe, TAPS, South Asian Dance Company (Bollywood), Passus Step Team, Crimson Dance Team, Harvard Middle Eastern Dance (belly dancing), Candela Dance Troupe, Harvard-Radcliffe Modern Dance Company, Asian American

Dance Troupe, Harvard Ballet Company, Harvard Breakers Organization, Movers and Shakers, Harvard Bhangra, Ballet Folklorico de Aztlán, HSPH Student Dance Club (hip hop), Mainly Jazz

Big music For a Big spacesanders tHeatre

Memorial Hall Kirkland and Quincy Sts.

THUD (The Harvard

Undergraduate Drummers)

Unconventional STOMP-style percussion piece

Mozart Society Orchestra

Selections from Mozart and Sibelius

River Charles Ensemble

Selection from spring repertoire

Bach Society Orchestra

Work by Mendelssohn

Harvard University Flute Ensemble

Spring showcase

Harvard University Band

Harvard fight songs and pop covers

Harvard College Opera

Selections from Hansel and Gretel, Così fan tutte, L'incoronazione di Poppea and a cantata by Handel

Harvard Wind EnsembleStudent-written compositions

open-air artstercentenary tHeatre

In front of Memorial Church, Harvard Yard

Tree of LifeNew composition by Sam

Wu '17 for solo piano (Chuhan Zhang '17 Yale)

and solo painter (Wa Liu '17 Yale)

Harvard Magic Society

See magic up close and learn a few tricks

King of the CatwalkOriginal children's musical on belonging, featuring a dog and mouse trying to

master the catwalk

Dance Advance!Pan-African Dance and Music Ensemble opens DanceFest in the Yard and processes to

Plaza tent

Tree of Life (continuation)

Solo piano and solo painter Sam Wu '17, composer

...that April morning... (after Samuel Beckett)Play inspired by Beckett Amanda Gann (GSAS)

At the Gate of Graceland

Poems inspired by Graceland on a day when Elvis' house-

museum was closed

Tree of Life (conclusion)

Solo piano and solo painter Sam Wu '17, composer

Jammin' a cappella yard stage

Din & Tonics, KeyChange Krokodiloes Callbacks,

Fallen AngelsVoiceLab,

With InterestRCS 'Cliffe Notes, Radcliffe Pitches

Glee Club Lite, Collegium

Underground

Opportunes, Lowkeys

Harvard Mirch, Under Construction,

Veritones

Performance Fair schedule subject to change. Visit ofa.fas.harvard.edu/arts for updates.

SATURDAY PERFORMANCE FAIR

Page 19: 2015 Harvard ARTS FIRST Festival Guide

19 16 17

General InformatIon

in case oF emergency, call 617.495.1212 Harvard university Police 1033 Massachusetts Ave.

in case oF medical emergency, call 617.495.5711university HealtH services

75 Mt. Auburn St.

Emergency Phones: Throughout the Harvard campus, emergency phones are designated with blue lights. Lift the receiver to dial the University Police office automatically.

Lost & Found: 617.495.1783

Box Offices• Harvard Box Office, Smith Campus Center, first floor,

1350 Massachusetts Ave., Harvard Square. Phone and walk-up sales, 617.496.2222, 12–6 pm, Tuesday–Sunday; or at boxoffice.harvard.edu

• Harvard Box Office at Sanders Theatre, Memorial Hall, 45 Quincy Street. Opens at 5 pm on evening performance days, noon on matinee days. Closes 30 minutes after curtain.

• Loeb Drama Center Box Office, 64 Brattle St. Phone and walk-up sales, 617.547.8300; Tuesday–Sunday, 12–5 pm

ARTS FIRST 2015 t-shirts on sale at the Harvard Box Office.

Food: During the Performance Fair there will be food trucks on the Plaza. The Cafe at the new Harvard Art Museums is open 10 am–4 pm daily. Also, enjoy the many restaurant options in and around Harvard Square.

Restrooms: Located in the basements of the Science Center and Memorial Hall and in the Smith Center Arcade.

PerFormances (including audience members) are being Filmed and PHotograPHed, and may be sHown Publicly by Harvard For Promotional PurPoses.

PERFORMANCE FAIR LOCATIONS

Performance faIr Venues In Green

= make art statIon

= PublIc art sIte

RIVER STREET

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WAY

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Morse School

Johnston Gate

Conway Playground

Riverside Press Park

Kingsley Park

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STREET

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PUBLIC ART IN HARVARD YARD Memory LibrarySaturday 2-2:20 & 4-4:20 pm, Friday-Saturday 7:30-8:15 pm

This commemorative installation features recordings from Widener Memorial Library patrons and workers, and the public is invited to narrate stories on Saturday afternoon. The evening performances on Friday and Saturday will translate these oral histories into a public art performance. Shu Cao Mo GSE ’15 with Yvette Drury Dubinsky and Joe Steele GSD ’16. Steps of Widener Library

The following projects can be seen Thursday–Sunday.

Beyond the BarkUsing the magnificent trees of Harvard Yard, Beyond the Bark tells a story about common wood products and their origins. Jared Friedman GSD ’15 and David Kennedy GSD ’16. Old Yard, near Stoughton Hall

Bioptimized What happens when morphology, the study of the form and structure of organisms, is adapted to the realm of architecture? Nicholas Jacobson GSD ’15 and Ahmed Hosny GSD ‘15. Old Yard, near Yard Stage

Path, ReplacedAn interactive installation looks at an old path through new eyes. Wilson Qin ’15 and William Orman ’16.Old Yard, near Hollis Hall

Spring ReliefGlad winter is over? The 15 metal figures in this large outdoor sculpture celebrate movement and joy—and relief—and offer a snow-free landscape. Lauren Volpert ’17. Old Yard, near Weld Hall

Harvard Undergraduate Global Health Forum: Global Health in Focus

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ART IN THE HOUSES Adams HouseResidual City: Film by Dean Adam Muri-RosenthalThursday 6-9 pm

Navigating the relationships between waste, consumption and mortality, this documentary presents a stark Venetian reality that defies deeply ingrained preconceptions about the City of Water. Recycled LandscapeThursday-Friday 6-9 pm

An exhibition of Harvard icons made from recycled materials. Adams House Arts Space, 10 Linden St.

Kirkland ARTS FIRST ExhibitionThursday-Friday 6-9 pm

Kirkland House, Senior Common Room (Entryway A) 95 Dunster St.

Mather House Pottery and WoodturningOpening Reception Friday 7 pm Friday–Sunday 9 am-9 pm

Exhibition of pottery and works crafted as a part of the Mather woodturning class.Mather House, Three Columns Gallery, 10 Cowperthwaite St.

Exhibition at QuincyFriday–Sunday 10 am-6:30 pm

A series of photographs explores the harmonic reliance that humanity has on all other forms of life. Saad Amer ’16.Quincy House Courtyard, 58 Plympton St.

(Dis)connectedOpening Reception Thursday 6-8:30 pm Friday–Sunday 1–6 pm

Impressions inspired by Jean Sibelius. Dudley House Dining Hall, Lehman Hall, Harvard Yard

A CAREER IN THE ARTS Harvardwood ReceptionThursday 5-7 pm

Celebrate ARTS FIRST with Boston members of Harvardwood, a nonprofit organization that provides professional resources and opportunities for Harvard community members in the arts, media and entertainment fields. Open to the Harvard community.Grafton Street Pub & Grill, 1230 Massachusetts Ave.

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EXHIBITIONS Visual and Environmental Studies Film/Video and Animation Screenings 2015Thursday 1-4 & 7-10 pm, Friday–Saturday 7–10 pm

Open StudiosFriday 5-7 pm

Five floors of work created in VES studio art and photography courses during the spring 2015 term.Studio Thesis Exhibition 2015Opening Reception Friday 5:30-7 pm

Saturday-Sunday 1-10 pm, through May 31Carpenter Center, 24 Quincy St.

Beyond the Success Paradigm: Alumni Stories of Success, Set-backs and Self-discoveryThursday–Sunday 10 am–6 pm, april 28-may 3Portraits of Harvard alums and their narratives explore notions of success and failure. Presented by Harvard Photography Club and the Success-Failure Project. Continues May 4-29 at the Bureau of Study Counsel, 5 Linden St. Science Center Arcade

Harvard Museum of Natural History Pop-up Exhibit: The Global Exposure ProjectThursday–Sunday 10 am–5 pm

Showcase of the 2015 Harvard Business School Art Society’s photography competition.26 Oxford St.

Drapetomania: Grupo Antillano & the Art of Afro-CubaThursday-Saturday 10 am–5 pm, through May 29This exhibition explores the contributions of a Cuban visual arts and cultural movement that thrived between 1978–1983. Ethelbert Cooper Gallery of African & African American Art, Hutchins Center, 102 Mt. Auburn St.

The Ephemeral CityThursday-Friday 7 am–7 pm

Exhibition by the Graduate School of Design focusing primarily on religion to examine forms of temporary urbanism worldwide, particularly in South Asia and Latin America. David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies (DRCLAS), CGIS South, 2nd Floor, 1730 Cambridge St.

Harvard Student Art ShowThursday 6-8 pm, Friday-Saturday 12-6 pm, Sunday 11 am-2 pm

Original artwork from graduate and undergraduate student artists from all 12 schools at Harvard. Knafel Center, CGIS North, 1737 Cambridge St.

Little Free LibraryThursday–SundayCampus Services mini book-sharing library, with paintings by Joy Jing ’17.The Plaza

Big Picture Community Photography ExhibitThursday–Sunday 9 am–5 pm

Homeless photographers view the Big Picture.Andover Chapel, Harvard Divinity School

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Harvard Semitic MuseumPop-up Exhibit: Harvard Ceramics StudioFriday–Saturday 10 am–4 pm

View clay creations from students in the Anthropomorphic Vessels class. Free.Special Gallery Hours: Saturday 10 am-4 pm

Monuments from Mesopotamia; From the Nile to the Euphrates6 Divinity Ave.

Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology Student-Led ToursFriday 12:30 pm, Saturday-Sunday 1 pm & 2 pm

Harvard students lead tours of the Peabody Museum.Musical HuesFriday 3–4 pm

The Dudley World Music Ensemble plays in the galleries; you draw what you hear. Art supplies available.11 Divinity Ave.

Global Health In FocusFriday 12–6 pm

Global health inequities through the camera lens—a passing exhibit.Science Center Arcade

Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments Special Gallery Hours: Saturday 11 am–4 pm

Finding Our Way: Exploring Human Navigation; Time, Life & Matter: Science in CambridgeNavigation: Student ProjectsSaturday 2–4 pm

Experience the art, tools and techniques of navigation used through the ages and across the globe with students from the Science of the Physical Universe course. Inside the Science Center, Room 251

Ukigumo Hakaze (Floating Clouds, Rustling Leaves)Saturday-Sunday 12-5 pm

Japanese language data visualization meets origami in an exploration of the creative process. Arts @ 29 Garden, enter on Chauncy St.

Arts of War: Artistry in Weapons Across Cultures, Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology

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THEATER ArtSunday 5 pm

Yasmina Reza's play on how our aesthetic tastes define our friendships and ourselves. Free. Tickets: [email protected] House, Junior Common Room, 10 Holyoke Pl.

BacheloretteThursday-Saturday 8 pm

Leslye Headland's vicious look at modern friendships and how the people you hate most are sometimes your best friends. Tickets: Harvard Box Office, boxoffice.harvard.eduFarkas Hall, 10-12 Holyoke St.

The Donkey ShowSaturday 7:30 & 10:30 pm

The ultimate disco experience—a crazy circus of mirror balls and feathered divas, roller skaters and hustle queens inspired by Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream. Diane Paulus, director. Tickets: American Repertory Theater, amrep.orgOberon, 2 Arrow St.

EndgameFriday–Sunday 8 pm

With biting comedy and titillating sadness, Samuel Beckett portrays a family at the end of all things. Free. Tickets: [email protected] Loeb Experimental Theater, 64 Brattle St.

Jake's WomenThursday-Saturday 7:30 pm, Sunday 2:30 pm

Neil Simon’s comedy about a novelist who faces marital crisis by daydreaming about the women in his life.Tickets: Harvard Box Office, boxoffice.harvard.eduAgassiz Theatre, 10 Garden St.

MiddletownThursday–Saturday 8 pm When Mary Swanson moves to Middletown, she learns that not everything is what it seems. Playwright Will Eno has been hailed as “a Samuel Beckett for the Jon Stewart generation.”Tickets: Harvard Box Office, boxoffice.harvard.eduLoeb Mainstage Theater, 64 Brattle St.

RedFriday 7 pm (Harvard students only; tickets required) Saturday-Sunday 1 pm (Free and open to tHe puBlic)John Logan’s play about painter Mark Rothko. See pages 6-7.Harvard Art Museums’ Menschel Hall, Lower Level, 32 Quincy St.

Two Girls and a GuyThursday–Saturday 7:30 pm

Two women confront their two-timing boyfriend. A romantic drama by James Toback '66. Free. Tickets: [email protected] House Library Theater, 28 Dewolfe St.

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MUSIC AthaliaFriday 7:30 pm

Harvard University Choir (Edward Elwyn Jones, Conductor) and Harvard Baroque Chamber Orchestra (Phoebe Carrai, Conductor) perform Handel's stellar oratorio.Memorial Church, Harvard Yard

Bach Society OrchestraSaturday 8 pm

Wenn Bach Bienen Gezüchtet Hätte by Arvo Pärt Violin Concerto in E minor by Mendelssohn, Stella Chen '15, violin. Paine Hall, behind Science Center

Arjuna's MeditationSunday 2-4 pm

Gamelan music directed by Jody Diamond and shadow puppets by Matthew Cohen combine music, humor and epic battles. SOCH/Hilles, Room P-02 (fifth floor), 59 Shepard St.

HMS Chamber Music SocietySunday 2-4 pm

An afternoon of chamber music, performed by Harvard Medical School students and colleagues.JBM Lounge, Vanderbilt Hall, Harvard Medical School

1812 OvertureSunday 3 pm

Tchaikovsky’s 1812 with kazoos, cannons and bells.Lowell House courtyard, 10 Holyoke Pl., use entryway F just past front gate

Dudley House Orchestra Spring ConcertSunday 9 pm

Music of Dvořák, Messiaen and Schubert.Sanders Theatre, 45 Quincy St.

Please see additional music listings for Harvard-Radcliffe Orchestra, Harvard Jazz Band, River Charles Ensemble, Eurydice Chamber Ensemble, Harvard-Radcliffe Collegium Musicum and Harvard-Radcliffe Chorus on pages 4, 7 and 9. Many more music listings can be found in the Performance Fair pull-out schedule.

Harvard-Radcliffe Orchestra performance, ARTS FIRST 2014.

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Scott A. Abell Flavia Buarque de

AlmeidaPhoteine

AnagnostopoulosMichael BrownSusan L. CarneyWalter K. Clair Cheryl DorseyChristopher B. FieldRichard W. Fisher

Verna C. GibbsLinda GreenhouseJames E. K. HildrethWalter IsaacsonJames E. JohnsonNicholas D. KristofDeanna LeeJane LubchencoMichael LyntonKaren Nelson MooreDiana Nelson

Tracy P. Palandjian Nicole Parent

HaugheySanjay H. PatelSwati A. Piramal Lesley Friedman

RosenthalCristián SamperKathryn A. TaylorGwill E. YorkKenji Yoshino

Harvard university board oF overseers, 2014-2015

Drew Gilpin Faust, President, Harvard University, ex officio Paul J. Finnegan, Treasurer, Harvard University, ex officio Morgan Chu, President, Board of Overseers

Thanks to Harvard community members who provided talent, time, energy and support for ARTS FIRST 2015. Special thanks to our collaborators and friends in the Office of Campus Services and the team at Harvard Alumni Association. Very special thanks to the Office of the President and the Board of Overseers for their invaluable support.

John Lithgow ’67, Master of the Arts at HarvardDrew Gilpin Faust, President of Harvard University, and the staff in the Office of the PresidentRakesh Khurana AM '97, PhD '98, Dean of Harvard CollegeDiana Sorensen, Dean of Arts and HumanitiesMeredith L. Weenick, Vice President for Campus Services

a standing ovation to:

CiCi Yu ’13Sheryl Chen GSE '13, Volunteer CoordinatorLisa Wilks Ball, Assistant Volunteer CoordinatorThe incredible Harvard buildings and grounds staff!

Carlton Cuse ’81, Co-Chair Robert Kraft ’76, Co-Chair Neal Baer ’79 GSE, ’82 GSAS, ’96 HMS Paul Buttenwieser ’60, ’64 HMS, ’00 HKSLynn Chang ’75 Sandy Climan ’77, ’79 HBS, ’79 SPH Barry Cohen ’74, ’77 HBS, ’77 HLS Ron Daniel ’54 HBS, ’05 UNVGreg Daniels ’85 Susanne Daniels ‘87Andrew Farkas ’82Sandy FarkasLucy Fisher ’71 Alan Gilbert ’89Lauren Greenfield ’87, ’88 GSAS

Charles Hirschhorn ’79 Thomas B. McGrath ’76, ’80 HBS Stanford Makishi ’87 Jeffrey Melvoin ’75 Andrea Miller-Keller ’63David E. Moore, Jr. ’78 Jim Nuzzo ’94 HLS Keri Putnam ’87 Mia Riverton Alpert ’99 Sylvia Scheuer David Scudder ’57 Thomas Viertel ’63 Irene Weigel ’70Lisa Wong ’79 Edward Zwick ’74

The OFA gratefully acknowledges the generous involvement and support of its advisors.

Harvard arts resource counciladvisory committee to tHe oFFice For tHe arts at Harvard

SPECIAL THANKS

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arts First 2015 oPerations team

Jack Megan, Director, Office for the Arts; Producer, ARTS FIRSTMarin Orlosky Randow '07-'08, ARTS FIRST CoordinatorDeena Anderson, Program Associate, Learning From Performers Alicia Anstead NF '08, Editor, Harvard Arts BlogLara Adams, Associate Director of Common Spaces OperationsTara Benedict, Senior Program Director, Marshal’s OfficeTina Bowen, Production Manager, Memorial Hall/Lowell Hall ComplexTina Chance, Staff Assistant, Office of the Governing BoardsEric Engel, Director, Memorial Hall/Lowell Hall ComplexDavid Friedrich, Assistant Dean for Student Life, Harvard CollegeMary Lou Kearns, General Manager, Harvard Dining ServicesDana Knox, Production Coordinator, College TheaterThomas Lee, Director, Learning From Performers and Communications, OFAJason Luke, Associate Director, Custodial and Support Services, Campus

ServicesCathy McCormick, Director of Programs, OFAMadeline Meehan, Director of Events Management, Campus ServicesBrice Norton Hennelly, Technology and Operations Manager, OFAErin Northington, Manager of Student Engagement Programs, Harvard Art

MuseumsRuth Polleys, Program Manager, Memorial Hall/Lowell Hall ComplexAimee Ricciardone, Executive Assistant to the Director, OFABill Sheehan, Assistant Director, Audio/Visual Services, Campus ServicesTeil Silverstein, Project Consultant, ARTS FIRSTStephanie Troisi, Student Services Coordinator, OFA

2015 guide

Emily Vides, DesignerMarin Orlosky Randow '07-'08, Production ManagerAlicia Anstead NF '08, Editorial ConsultantSelena Kim '15, Contributing Designer

cover design/logo design

Stoltze Design

PHotograPHy

Inside back cover: Jacob Belcher/OFA. All others, unless specified, courtesy of the artists.

2015 student Producers

Performance FairSetenay Gel ‘17 Selena Kim ‘15 Annie Schugart ‘18Samuel Hagen ‘18 Betty Lema ‘17 Kristen Shim ‘17Joy Jing ‘17 Laura Peterson ‘16 Faye Zhang ‘17 DanceFestJulia Cataldo ‘15 Tessa Markewich ‘16Bridget Scanlon ‘15

Swan Lake: For the Birds! Lilly Riverón ‘17, Director and Principal Choreographer Sam Wattrus ‘16 and Rose Whitcomb '16, Co-Musical Directors Sam Clark ‘15, Artistic Liaison, Hasty Pudding Theatricals

FESTIVAL CREDITS

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2015 ARTIST DEVELOPMENT FELLOWSHIP RECIPIENTS

Alice Abracen '15Aislinn Brophy '17Reina Gattuso '15Devon Guinn '17

Heeyoung (Angie) Jo '16Madeline Lear '17George Meyer '15

Rebecca Panovka '16David Sheynberg '16Sarah Yeoh-Wang '17Yan (Faye) Zhang '17

Artist Development Fellowships support the development of promising and/or accomplished student artists who have identified an opportunity for transformative artistic growth.

Fellowships are awarded annually by the Faculty Council on the Arts, a standing committee of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences.

Read about current and past Fellows and their work on the Harvard Arts Blog: ofa.fas.harvard.edu/wordpress

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2008

2014

2006

2013

Harvard Arts Medal Recipients, 1995-2015

Damian Woetzel MPA ’07

2015

1995: Jack Lemmon ’47 / 1996: Pete Seeger ’40 / 1997: Bonnie Raitt ’72 /

1998: John Updike ’54 / 1999: David Hays ’52 / 2000: John Harbison ’60 /

2001: Peter Sellars ’80 / 2002: William Christie ’66 / 2003: Mira Nair ’79 /

2004: Yo-Yo Ma ’76 / 2005: Maxine Kumin ’46 / 2006: Christopher Durang ’71 /

2007: John Adams ’69 MA ’72 / 2008: Joshua Redman ’91 / Spring 2009: John

Ashbery ’49 / Fall 2009: Fred Ho ’79 / 2010: Catherine Lord ’70 / 2011: Susan

Meiselas Ed.M. ’71 / 2012: Tommy Lee Jones ’69 / 2013: Matt Damon ’92 /

2014: Margaret Atwood AM ’62, Litt.D. ’04 / 2015: Damian Woetzel MPA ’07

fall 2009

2011

20122002

2003

spring 2009

1997 2004

1999

1995

2000

1998

2001

2007

2005

2010

1996


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