Friday Fibers at Chapel House
Friday, April 4, 2025 12:00–1:00 PM
Description
For Colgate faculty, staff, students, and community members who knit, crochet, or stitch, or just enjoy meandering conversation—please join us in the Chapel House Music Room at noon on Fridays. Bring your lunch, beverages are provided!
More from The Arts
- Apr 43:30 PMHappy Hour Color CrawlThe Arts | Alumni Hall, Longyear Museum of Anthropology
Join the museums and galleries threaded across Colgate’s campus to learn about the colorants, dyes, and technological aspects of weaving in a color-based gallery crawl!At each of the four participating galleries, learn about colorants and dyes present in our woven artworks from Colgate students and Museum Ambassadors. Make sure to pick up a Happy Hour Color Crawl Passport, and have it stamped at each of the galleries to enter a raffle, and win a weaving-based prize. Finish the Happy Hour Color Crawl at the opening of the Suchi Reddy exhibition at Clifford Gallery in Little Hall, where color-based mocktails will be available based on the four participating galleries.Progress at your own pace between museums and galleries. Recommended route: Wynn Hall (first floor), Longyear Museum of Anthropology (Alumni Hall, second floor), Picker Art Gallery (Dana Arts Center, second floor), and finishing at Clifford Gallery (101 Little Hall)This event is a part of Arts, Creativity, and Innovation Weekend. View the full schedule. - Apr 43:30 PMImmersive Film and Dance in The VaultThe Arts | Bernstein Hall, 102, The Vault
This immersive, multi-camera installation will combine projections and live movement, through a collaboration between two classes on filmmaking and dance imagery and improvisation. - Apr 44:00 PMSuchi Reddy Exhibition OpeningThe Arts | Little Hall, Clifford Gallery (101 Little Hall)
Join us for the exhibition opening reception for Suchi Reddy's Bias and Belonging.Through an ongoing series of community conversations, the artist and architect Suchi Reddy has been in dialog with students, faculty, staff and townspeople throughout the 2024-2025 academic year to learn about the ways in which our encounters with reflection and misreflection in physical and digital spaces contribute to our experience of bias and belonging. A culmination of the year's conversations, Bias and Belonging poetically reframes the Colgate community's embodied experience of belonging in woven, textual and digital forms. Bias and Belonging is the latest iteration of Reddy's ongoing exploration into embodied states of being that reflect our individual and collective experience as we code switch and transform in evolving environments both digital and physical.Presented by the Art Department and the Christian A. Johnson Foundation. The Christian A. Johnson Endeavor Foundation Artist-in-Residence was established in 1986 as a challenge grant in support of the arts at Colgate. The residency program permits one or more artists to become part of the Colgate community every academic year.This event is a part of Arts, Creativity, and Innovation Weekend. - Apr 5All dayUniversity Libraries: National Poetry MonthThe Arts | Case-Geyer Library
National Poetry Month, launched by the Academy of American Poets in 1996, is an annual celebration in April that aims to highlight the importance of poetry and poets in American culture, encouraging people to read, write, and share poetry.The University Libraries, in collaboration with The Upstate Institute and the Adirondack Center for Writing, will be circulating a poetry machine throughout the Village of Hamilton in April.Pay attention the next time you’re at Case-Geyer, Flour & Salt, MOMs, or the Hamilton Public Library. You might encounter the ACW’s Poetry Machine.The Poetry Machine is an old capsule machine, the kind you might spend two quarters to get a bouncy ball, sticky hand, or small plastic alien from in the vestibule of a convenience store. With our machine, you can get your very own poem (for free—no quarters necessary).Inside the Poetry Machine are 10 different poems. Each one features a unique style of poetry, including haiku, cento, epistolary, list, ode, ekphrasis, prose poem, how-to, erasure, and cut-up.If you want to "check out" more poetry, visit the poetry display on the third floor of Case-Geyer. - Apr 51:00 PMSuchi Reddy: Bias and Belonging ExhibitionThe Arts | Little Hall, Clifford Gallery (101 Little Hall)
Through an ongoing series of community conversations, the artist and architect Suchi Reddy has been in dialog with students, faculty, staff and townspeople throughout the 2024-2025 academic year to learn about the ways in which our encounters with reflection and misreflection in physical and digital spaces contribute to our experience of bias and belonging. A culmination of the year's conversations, Bias and Belonging poetically reframes the Colgate community's embodied experience of belonging in woven, textual and digital forms. Bias and Belonging is the latest iteration of Reddy's ongoing exploration into embodied states of being that reflect our individual and collective experience as we code switch and transform in evolving environments both digital and physical.Presented by the Art Department and the Christian A. Johnson Foundation*.Join us for the exhibition opening reception and gallery talk Friday, April 4, 4 p.m. (part of Arts, Creativity, and Innovation Weekend 2025).*The Christian A. Johnson Endeavor Foundation Artist-in-Residence was established in 1986 as a challenge grant in support of the arts at Colgate. The residency program permits one or more artists to become part of the Colgate community every academic year.*Please note: Weekend hours are dependent on the availability of student monitors. If driving a distance, please contact the department (315-228-7633), during regular working hours, to ensure the gallery will be open. The gallery is not open during university breaks and holidays. - Apr 54:00 PMSpecial Film Screening: Flipside with Producer Adam Goldman ’94The Arts | Hamilton Movie Theater
When filmmaker Chris Wilcha revisits the record store he worked at as a teenager in New Jersey, he finds the once-thriving bastion of music and weirdness from his youth slowly falling apart and out of touch with the times. FLIPSIDE documents his tragicomic attempt to revive the store while revisiting other documentary projects he has abandoned over the years. In the process, Wilcha captures This American Life icon Ira Glass in the midst of a creative rebirth, discovers the origin story of David Bowie’s ode to a local New Jersey cable television hero, and uncovers the unlikely connection between jazz photographer Herman Leonard and TV writer David Milch. This disparate collection of stories coheres into something strange and expansive — a moving meditation on music, work, and the sacrifices and satisfaction of trying to live a creative life.Co-sponsored by the Arts, Creativity, and Innovation Initiative, and part of Arts, Creativity, and Innovation Weekend 2025