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Wednesday, October 22, 2025
- 8:45 AM15mMorning Reflection with Kim Cataldo-MurrayToday's Events | Colgate Memorial Chapel, Judd Chapel
Honoring the spirit of past Colgate traditions, we invite you to gather together for sacred pause and brief encounters with the diverse religious, spiritual, and secular practices represented in our collective community. Join us for 15 minutes of music, a reading or prayer, and brief reflection. Light refreshments will be served. - 8:45 AM15mMorning Reflection with Kim Cataldo-MurrayCampus Life | Colgate Memorial Chapel, Judd Chapel
Honoring the spirit of past Colgate traditions, we invite you to gather together for sacred pause and brief encounters with the diverse religious, spiritual, and secular practices represented in our collective community. Join us for 15 minutes of music, a reading or prayer, and brief reflection. Light refreshments will be served. - 9:30 AM7hLongyear Museum of Anthropology Exhibition: Hostile Terrain 94Today's Events | Longyear Museum of Anthropology, Alumni Hall - 2nd Floor
Hostile Terrain 94 (HT94) is a participatory exhibition created by the Undocumented Migration Project, a non-profit organization that focuses on the social process of immigration and raises awareness through research, education, and outreach.The exhibit is composed of approximately 3,400 handwritten toe tags that represent migrants who have died trying to cross the Sonoran Desert from the mid-1990s to 2020. These tags are geolocated on a large wall map of the Arizona-Mexico border, showing the exact locations where human remains were found. The physical act of writing out the names and information for the dead invites participants to reflect, witness and stand in solidarity with those who have lost their lives in search of a better one. This exhibit is taking place at over 120 institutions across 6 continents with the intention to raise awareness about the humanitarian crisis at America’s southern border and to engage with communities around the world in conversations about migration.The construction of HT94 is made possible by teams of volunteers from each hosting location, who participate in tag-filling workshops, where they write the details of the dead and then publicly place the tags on the map – in the exact location where each individual's remains were found. Some tags also contain QR codes that link to content related to migrant stories and visuals connected to immigration. - 9:30 AM7hLongyear Museum of Anthropology Exhibition: Hostile Terrain 94Academics | Longyear Museum of Anthropology, Alumni Hall - 2nd Floor
Hostile Terrain 94 (HT94) is a participatory exhibition created by the Undocumented Migration Project, a non-profit organization that focuses on the social process of immigration and raises awareness through research, education, and outreach.The exhibit is composed of approximately 3,400 handwritten toe tags that represent migrants who have died trying to cross the Sonoran Desert from the mid-1990s to 2020. These tags are geolocated on a large wall map of the Arizona-Mexico border, showing the exact locations where human remains were found. The physical act of writing out the names and information for the dead invites participants to reflect, witness and stand in solidarity with those who have lost their lives in search of a better one. This exhibit is taking place at over 120 institutions across 6 continents with the intention to raise awareness about the humanitarian crisis at America’s southern border and to engage with communities around the world in conversations about migration.The construction of HT94 is made possible by teams of volunteers from each hosting location, who participate in tag-filling workshops, where they write the details of the dead and then publicly place the tags on the map – in the exact location where each individual's remains were found. Some tags also contain QR codes that link to content related to migrant stories and visuals connected to immigration. - 9:30 AM7hLongyear Museum of Anthropology Exhibition: Hostile Terrain 94The Arts | Longyear Museum of Anthropology, Alumni Hall - 2nd Floor
Hostile Terrain 94 (HT94) is a participatory exhibition created by the Undocumented Migration Project, a non-profit organization that focuses on the social process of immigration and raises awareness through research, education, and outreach.The exhibit is composed of approximately 3,400 handwritten toe tags that represent migrants who have died trying to cross the Sonoran Desert from the mid-1990s to 2020. These tags are geolocated on a large wall map of the Arizona-Mexico border, showing the exact locations where human remains were found. The physical act of writing out the names and information for the dead invites participants to reflect, witness and stand in solidarity with those who have lost their lives in search of a better one. This exhibit is taking place at over 120 institutions across 6 continents with the intention to raise awareness about the humanitarian crisis at America’s southern border and to engage with communities around the world in conversations about migration.The construction of HT94 is made possible by teams of volunteers from each hosting location, who participate in tag-filling workshops, where they write the details of the dead and then publicly place the tags on the map – in the exact location where each individual's remains were found. Some tags also contain QR codes that link to content related to migrant stories and visuals connected to immigration. - 9:30 AM7hLongyear Museum of Anthropology Exhibition: Hostile Terrain 94Campus Life | Longyear Museum of Anthropology, Alumni Hall - 2nd Floor
Hostile Terrain 94 (HT94) is a participatory exhibition created by the Undocumented Migration Project, a non-profit organization that focuses on the social process of immigration and raises awareness through research, education, and outreach.The exhibit is composed of approximately 3,400 handwritten toe tags that represent migrants who have died trying to cross the Sonoran Desert from the mid-1990s to 2020. These tags are geolocated on a large wall map of the Arizona-Mexico border, showing the exact locations where human remains were found. The physical act of writing out the names and information for the dead invites participants to reflect, witness and stand in solidarity with those who have lost their lives in search of a better one. This exhibit is taking place at over 120 institutions across 6 continents with the intention to raise awareness about the humanitarian crisis at America’s southern border and to engage with communities around the world in conversations about migration.The construction of HT94 is made possible by teams of volunteers from each hosting location, who participate in tag-filling workshops, where they write the details of the dead and then publicly place the tags on the map – in the exact location where each individual's remains were found. Some tags also contain QR codes that link to content related to migrant stories and visuals connected to immigration. - 10:00 AM7hPicker Art Gallery Exhibition: X: Gender, Identity, PresenceCampus Life | Dana Arts Center, Picker Art Gallery, 2nd Floor
Hundreds of bills targeting trans* individuals are currently making their way through state legislative bodies. These range from bathroom bans to expulsion from sports teams to the denial of healthcare. Amid the increasingly hostile rhetoric and attempts to erase trans* and queer lives, the artists in this exhibition use a variety of media to tell powerful counternarratives about perseverance, vulnerability, and kinship among trans* and queer communities.The exhibition opens with a new live performance connecting art and athletics by Nicki Duval (they/them) and Robbie Trocchia (he/they), featuring figure skater Milk. Films exploring themes of transgender identity, visibility, bodies, and politics by multidisciplinary artist Cassils (he/they) are joined by an installation of exquisite cut-paper portraits by Antonius-TÃn Bui (they/them). The works by these leading contemporary artists are complemented by a selection from the Picker collection that underlines the past, present, and future existence and vitality of trans* and queer artists. - 10:00 AM7hPicker Art Gallery Exhibition: X: Gender, Identity, PresenceThe Arts | Dana Arts Center, Picker Art Gallery, 2nd Floor
Hundreds of bills targeting trans* individuals are currently making their way through state legislative bodies. These range from bathroom bans to expulsion from sports teams to the denial of healthcare. Amid the increasingly hostile rhetoric and attempts to erase trans* and queer lives, the artists in this exhibition use a variety of media to tell powerful counternarratives about perseverance, vulnerability, and kinship among trans* and queer communities.The exhibition opens with a new live performance connecting art and athletics by Nicki Duval (they/them) and Robbie Trocchia (he/they), featuring figure skater Milk. Films exploring themes of transgender identity, visibility, bodies, and politics by multidisciplinary artist Cassils (he/they) are joined by an installation of exquisite cut-paper portraits by Antonius-TÃn Bui (they/them). The works by these leading contemporary artists are complemented by a selection from the Picker collection that underlines the past, present, and future existence and vitality of trans* and queer artists. - 10:00 AM7hPicker Art Gallery Exhibition: X: Gender, Identity, PresenceAcademics | Dana Arts Center, Picker Art Gallery, 2nd Floor
Hundreds of bills targeting trans* individuals are currently making their way through state legislative bodies. These range from bathroom bans to expulsion from sports teams to the denial of healthcare. Amid the increasingly hostile rhetoric and attempts to erase trans* and queer lives, the artists in this exhibition use a variety of media to tell powerful counternarratives about perseverance, vulnerability, and kinship among trans* and queer communities.The exhibition opens with a new live performance connecting art and athletics by Nicki Duval (they/them) and Robbie Trocchia (he/they), featuring figure skater Milk. Films exploring themes of transgender identity, visibility, bodies, and politics by multidisciplinary artist Cassils (he/they) are joined by an installation of exquisite cut-paper portraits by Antonius-TÃn Bui (they/them). The works by these leading contemporary artists are complemented by a selection from the Picker collection that underlines the past, present, and future existence and vitality of trans* and queer artists. - 10:00 AM7hPicker Art Gallery Exhibition: X: Gender, Identity, PresenceToday's Events | Dana Arts Center, Picker Art Gallery, 2nd Floor
Hundreds of bills targeting trans* individuals are currently making their way through state legislative bodies. These range from bathroom bans to expulsion from sports teams to the denial of healthcare. Amid the increasingly hostile rhetoric and attempts to erase trans* and queer lives, the artists in this exhibition use a variety of media to tell powerful counternarratives about perseverance, vulnerability, and kinship among trans* and queer communities.The exhibition opens with a new live performance connecting art and athletics by Nicki Duval (they/them) and Robbie Trocchia (he/they), featuring figure skater Milk. Films exploring themes of transgender identity, visibility, bodies, and politics by multidisciplinary artist Cassils (he/they) are joined by an installation of exquisite cut-paper portraits by Antonius-TÃn Bui (they/them). The works by these leading contemporary artists are complemented by a selection from the Picker collection that underlines the past, present, and future existence and vitality of trans* and queer artists. - 10:30 AM6hClifford Gallery Exhibition: HOLESThe Arts | Little Hall, Clifford Gallery (101 Little Hall)
This exhibition expands on the forthcoming issue of the artist-run journal Effects, organized around the motif of the hole. Holes draw our attention to the periphery, the edges of the visible, bringing to the fore what typically disappears into the margin. Through rips and shadows, enclosures and erasures, the included artworks address transience, destructive violence, and lost histories, while also evoking the nascent formation of as-yet-unknown patterns for meeting the problems of living — with ourselves, with one another, and with absence.Featuring work by Noel Anderson, Milano Chow, Mary Helena Clark, Clementine Keith-Roach, Lakshmi Luthra, Eric N. Mack, Nour Mobarak & Jeffrey Stuker, Christopher Page, Paul Pfeiffer, Adam Putnam, Larissa Sansour & Søren Lind, Paul Sietsema, and Patricia TreibOpening reception Wednesday, Sept. 24, following the 4:30pm Art LectureCurated by Lakshmi Luthra, Associate Professor of Art and Film & Media StudiesLearn more about the exhibition*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. - 10:30 AM6hClifford Gallery Exhibition: HOLESCampus Life | Little Hall, Clifford Gallery (101 Little Hall)
This exhibition expands on the forthcoming issue of the artist-run journal Effects, organized around the motif of the hole. Holes draw our attention to the periphery, the edges of the visible, bringing to the fore what typically disappears into the margin. Through rips and shadows, enclosures and erasures, the included artworks address transience, destructive violence, and lost histories, while also evoking the nascent formation of as-yet-unknown patterns for meeting the problems of living — with ourselves, with one another, and with absence.Featuring work by Noel Anderson, Milano Chow, Mary Helena Clark, Clementine Keith-Roach, Lakshmi Luthra, Eric N. Mack, Nour Mobarak & Jeffrey Stuker, Christopher Page, Paul Pfeiffer, Adam Putnam, Larissa Sansour & Søren Lind, Paul Sietsema, and Patricia TreibOpening reception Wednesday, Sept. 24, following the 4:30pm Art LectureCurated by Lakshmi Luthra, Associate Professor of Art and Film & Media StudiesLearn more about the exhibition*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. - 10:30 AM6hClifford Gallery Exhibition: HOLESToday's Events | Little Hall, Clifford Gallery (101 Little Hall)
This exhibition expands on the forthcoming issue of the artist-run journal Effects, organized around the motif of the hole. Holes draw our attention to the periphery, the edges of the visible, bringing to the fore what typically disappears into the margin. Through rips and shadows, enclosures and erasures, the included artworks address transience, destructive violence, and lost histories, while also evoking the nascent formation of as-yet-unknown patterns for meeting the problems of living — with ourselves, with one another, and with absence.Featuring work by Noel Anderson, Milano Chow, Mary Helena Clark, Clementine Keith-Roach, Lakshmi Luthra, Eric N. Mack, Nour Mobarak & Jeffrey Stuker, Christopher Page, Paul Pfeiffer, Adam Putnam, Larissa Sansour & Søren Lind, Paul Sietsema, and Patricia TreibOpening reception Wednesday, Sept. 24, following the 4:30pm Art LectureCurated by Lakshmi Luthra, Associate Professor of Art and Film & Media StudiesLearn more about the exhibition*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. - 10:30 AM6hClifford Gallery Exhibition: HOLESAcademics | Little Hall, Clifford Gallery (101 Little Hall)
This exhibition expands on the forthcoming issue of the artist-run journal Effects, organized around the motif of the hole. Holes draw our attention to the periphery, the edges of the visible, bringing to the fore what typically disappears into the margin. Through rips and shadows, enclosures and erasures, the included artworks address transience, destructive violence, and lost histories, while also evoking the nascent formation of as-yet-unknown patterns for meeting the problems of living — with ourselves, with one another, and with absence.Featuring work by Noel Anderson, Milano Chow, Mary Helena Clark, Clementine Keith-Roach, Lakshmi Luthra, Eric N. Mack, Nour Mobarak & Jeffrey Stuker, Christopher Page, Paul Pfeiffer, Adam Putnam, Larissa Sansour & Søren Lind, Paul Sietsema, and Patricia TreibOpening reception Wednesday, Sept. 24, following the 4:30pm Art LectureCurated by Lakshmi Luthra, Associate Professor of Art and Film & Media StudiesLearn more about the exhibition*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. - 12:15 PM1hRecoup & SoupCampus Life | Lawrence Hall 305
Chapel House takes meditation on the road. Join us for 20 minutes of silent meditation, sitting on a cushion or in a chair, followed by a lunch of homemade bread and soup.Led by Chapel House Program Coordinator Jeff McArn and therapy dog, Lily. Held weekly on Wednesdays, beginning on Sept. 3 - 12:15 PM1hRecoup & SoupToday's Events | Lawrence Hall 305
Chapel House takes meditation on the road. Join us for 20 minutes of silent meditation, sitting on a cushion or in a chair, followed by a lunch of homemade bread and soup.Led by Chapel House Program Coordinator Jeff McArn and therapy dog, Lily. Held weekly on Wednesdays, beginning on Sept. 3 - 3:00 PM1h 30mPerfect Fit: Seamless Image Composites with AIToday's Events | Case-Geyer Library, 548
Learn how to use Photoshop’s AI powered tools - like Generative Fill, Harmonize and Select and Mask - to create realistic image composites.This event is part of Digital Design Daze: 90-minute workshops aimed at helping attendees take a project from concept to prototype using digital tools available at Colgate. Some workshops will help you ‘level up’ current things you might be doing already, others will introduce you to new ideas, tools, and workflows that you can use in the future.Discover more workshop sessions - 4:30 PM1hArt Department Lecture: Jeffrey Stuker and Patricia TreibAcademics | Little Hall, 105 (Golden Auditorium)
Join exhibiting artists Jeffrey Stuker and Patricia Treib in conversation around the themes in the current Clifford Gallery exhibition HOLES.Jeffrey Stuker’s intricately rendered films and still imagery examine the relationship between synthetic and organic, engaging and considering mimicry as a metaphor for how organisms relate to their environments. He produces extremely accurate computer-generated imagery that he imbues with historical, scientific or industrial references to create touchpoints between the subjects the works depict and the technology used to create them.Stuker lives and works in Los Angeles and is represented by Ben Hunter, London and Ehrlich Steinberg, Los Angeles. Recent exhibitions include Full Haus: The Seeld Library (storefront: MoCA, Los Angeles, 2018); Made in LA: A version (Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, 2020); The International Biennial of Contemporary Photography (MOMuS, Thessaloniki Greece, 2021); Objects of Desire (Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 2022); Next Year in Monte Carlo (Ben Hunter, London, 2023); Feelings out of Season (The Fulcrum Press, Los Angeles, 2023); Pacific Standard Time (Getty Museum, Los Angeles and the University of California, San Diego, 2024); and Mantis Te Vidit (STUDIOLI La Ripa, Rome, 2024).Patricia Treib's paintings are composed around sensuous details, absences, and shifts in perspective. Despite their broad, sweeping gestures, the paintings can be seen as attentive meditations. Gleaned from sources that hold personal significance, Treib focuses on the space between forms, making in-betweenness a primary motif. Her paintings disclose these interspaces by transforming ephemeral non-things into iconic presences, whose highly pigmented color correspondences radiate an inner luminosity. Treib limits the time of making – or performing – each painting to a single day. Partially concealed behind this decisive act are the innumerable rehearsals and revisions that lead up to the painting, both in the evolution of a motif over several years, developed through myriad works on paper, and in the removals, adjustments, and erasures that take place on the surface of the canvas itself. Ripe, suspended forms nestle among accentuated flourishes, suggesting linguistic units or punctuation, and evoke medieval illuminations and 18th century Swedish Kurbits painting.Treib lives and works in Brooklyn, New York. She received a Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship (2020), an Artadia Award (2017), and was shortlisted for the Jean-Francois Prat Prize (2018) and has participated in residencies at ARCH, Athens (2021); the American Academy in Rome (2017), the Dora Maar House (2014) and MacDowell (2013). Recent solo exhibitions include Sinuations, Bureau, New York (2025); Icon Arms, ARCH, Athens, Greece (2024); Enfold, Kate MacGarry, London (2024); Undulations, Galerie Nordenhake, Stockholm (2023); Oscillations, Galerie Nordenhake, Mexico City, Mexico (2022), Variations, F, Houston, TX (2021); and Sleeve Variations, Overduin & Co., Los Angeles, CA (2021). Recent group exhibitions include Thresholds, curated by Nichole Caruso, Wolford House, Los Angeles, CA (2024), Of Flesh and Air, GalerÃa Marta Cervera, Madrid (2024); Friends in a Field: Conversations with Raoul De Keyser, Mu.ZEE, Ostend, Belgium (2022). Treib received an MFA from Columbia University and a BFA from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Her work has been written about in ArtForum, The New Yorker, Art in America, The New York Times, The Brooklyn Rail, and Bomb Magazine. Treib's first monograph was published in 2020 and features an essay by Joanna Fiduccia and an interview with poet and novelist Ben Lerner. - 4:30 PM1hArt Department Lecture: Jeffrey Stuker and Patricia TreibToday's Events | Little Hall, 105 (Golden Auditorium)
Join exhibiting artists Jeffrey Stuker and Patricia Treib in conversation around the themes in the current Clifford Gallery exhibition HOLES.Jeffrey Stuker’s intricately rendered films and still imagery examine the relationship between synthetic and organic, engaging and considering mimicry as a metaphor for how organisms relate to their environments. He produces extremely accurate computer-generated imagery that he imbues with historical, scientific or industrial references to create touchpoints between the subjects the works depict and the technology used to create them.Stuker lives and works in Los Angeles and is represented by Ben Hunter, London and Ehrlich Steinberg, Los Angeles. Recent exhibitions include Full Haus: The Seeld Library (storefront: MoCA, Los Angeles, 2018); Made in LA: A version (Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, 2020); The International Biennial of Contemporary Photography (MOMuS, Thessaloniki Greece, 2021); Objects of Desire (Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 2022); Next Year in Monte Carlo (Ben Hunter, London, 2023); Feelings out of Season (The Fulcrum Press, Los Angeles, 2023); Pacific Standard Time (Getty Museum, Los Angeles and the University of California, San Diego, 2024); and Mantis Te Vidit (STUDIOLI La Ripa, Rome, 2024).Patricia Treib's paintings are composed around sensuous details, absences, and shifts in perspective. Despite their broad, sweeping gestures, the paintings can be seen as attentive meditations. Gleaned from sources that hold personal significance, Treib focuses on the space between forms, making in-betweenness a primary motif. Her paintings disclose these interspaces by transforming ephemeral non-things into iconic presences, whose highly pigmented color correspondences radiate an inner luminosity. Treib limits the time of making – or performing – each painting to a single day. Partially concealed behind this decisive act are the innumerable rehearsals and revisions that lead up to the painting, both in the evolution of a motif over several years, developed through myriad works on paper, and in the removals, adjustments, and erasures that take place on the surface of the canvas itself. Ripe, suspended forms nestle among accentuated flourishes, suggesting linguistic units or punctuation, and evoke medieval illuminations and 18th century Swedish Kurbits painting.Treib lives and works in Brooklyn, New York. She received a Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship (2020), an Artadia Award (2017), and was shortlisted for the Jean-Francois Prat Prize (2018) and has participated in residencies at ARCH, Athens (2021); the American Academy in Rome (2017), the Dora Maar House (2014) and MacDowell (2013). Recent solo exhibitions include Sinuations, Bureau, New York (2025); Icon Arms, ARCH, Athens, Greece (2024); Enfold, Kate MacGarry, London (2024); Undulations, Galerie Nordenhake, Stockholm (2023); Oscillations, Galerie Nordenhake, Mexico City, Mexico (2022), Variations, F, Houston, TX (2021); and Sleeve Variations, Overduin & Co., Los Angeles, CA (2021). Recent group exhibitions include Thresholds, curated by Nichole Caruso, Wolford House, Los Angeles, CA (2024), Of Flesh and Air, GalerÃa Marta Cervera, Madrid (2024); Friends in a Field: Conversations with Raoul De Keyser, Mu.ZEE, Ostend, Belgium (2022). Treib received an MFA from Columbia University and a BFA from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Her work has been written about in ArtForum, The New Yorker, Art in America, The New York Times, The Brooklyn Rail, and Bomb Magazine. Treib's first monograph was published in 2020 and features an essay by Joanna Fiduccia and an interview with poet and novelist Ben Lerner. - 4:30 PM1hArt Department Lecture: Jeffrey Stuker and Patricia TreibThe Arts | Little Hall, 105 (Golden Auditorium)
Join exhibiting artists Jeffrey Stuker and Patricia Treib in conversation around the themes in the current Clifford Gallery exhibition HOLES.Jeffrey Stuker’s intricately rendered films and still imagery examine the relationship between synthetic and organic, engaging and considering mimicry as a metaphor for how organisms relate to their environments. He produces extremely accurate computer-generated imagery that he imbues with historical, scientific or industrial references to create touchpoints between the subjects the works depict and the technology used to create them.Stuker lives and works in Los Angeles and is represented by Ben Hunter, London and Ehrlich Steinberg, Los Angeles. Recent exhibitions include Full Haus: The Seeld Library (storefront: MoCA, Los Angeles, 2018); Made in LA: A version (Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, 2020); The International Biennial of Contemporary Photography (MOMuS, Thessaloniki Greece, 2021); Objects of Desire (Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 2022); Next Year in Monte Carlo (Ben Hunter, London, 2023); Feelings out of Season (The Fulcrum Press, Los Angeles, 2023); Pacific Standard Time (Getty Museum, Los Angeles and the University of California, San Diego, 2024); and Mantis Te Vidit (STUDIOLI La Ripa, Rome, 2024).Patricia Treib's paintings are composed around sensuous details, absences, and shifts in perspective. Despite their broad, sweeping gestures, the paintings can be seen as attentive meditations. Gleaned from sources that hold personal significance, Treib focuses on the space between forms, making in-betweenness a primary motif. Her paintings disclose these interspaces by transforming ephemeral non-things into iconic presences, whose highly pigmented color correspondences radiate an inner luminosity. Treib limits the time of making – or performing – each painting to a single day. Partially concealed behind this decisive act are the innumerable rehearsals and revisions that lead up to the painting, both in the evolution of a motif over several years, developed through myriad works on paper, and in the removals, adjustments, and erasures that take place on the surface of the canvas itself. Ripe, suspended forms nestle among accentuated flourishes, suggesting linguistic units or punctuation, and evoke medieval illuminations and 18th century Swedish Kurbits painting.Treib lives and works in Brooklyn, New York. She received a Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship (2020), an Artadia Award (2017), and was shortlisted for the Jean-Francois Prat Prize (2018) and has participated in residencies at ARCH, Athens (2021); the American Academy in Rome (2017), the Dora Maar House (2014) and MacDowell (2013). Recent solo exhibitions include Sinuations, Bureau, New York (2025); Icon Arms, ARCH, Athens, Greece (2024); Enfold, Kate MacGarry, London (2024); Undulations, Galerie Nordenhake, Stockholm (2023); Oscillations, Galerie Nordenhake, Mexico City, Mexico (2022), Variations, F, Houston, TX (2021); and Sleeve Variations, Overduin & Co., Los Angeles, CA (2021). Recent group exhibitions include Thresholds, curated by Nichole Caruso, Wolford House, Los Angeles, CA (2024), Of Flesh and Air, GalerÃa Marta Cervera, Madrid (2024); Friends in a Field: Conversations with Raoul De Keyser, Mu.ZEE, Ostend, Belgium (2022). Treib received an MFA from Columbia University and a BFA from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Her work has been written about in ArtForum, The New Yorker, Art in America, The New York Times, The Brooklyn Rail, and Bomb Magazine. Treib's first monograph was published in 2020 and features an essay by Joanna Fiduccia and an interview with poet and novelist Ben Lerner. - 4:30 PM1h 30mKraynak Institute Speaker: Neetu ArnoldAcademics | Persson Hall, Auditorium
Neetu Arnold is an education researcher at the Manhattan Institute. She has written for several publications, including The Wall Street Journal, Politico, and USA Today. She is a graduate of Cornell University. - 4:30 PM1h 30mKraynak Institute Speaker: Neetu ArnoldToday's Events | Persson Hall, Auditorium
Neetu Arnold is an education researcher at the Manhattan Institute. She has written for several publications, including The Wall Street Journal, Politico, and USA Today. She is a graduate of Cornell University. - 6:00 PM45mChili with LilyCampus Life | Chapel House
Drop by for a bowl of veg chili, and the affection of a chill therapy dog who will love you for the few seconds the milk bone you give her lasts. Bring a friend! Just for fun! - 6:00 PM45mChili with LilyToday's Events | Chapel House
Drop by for a bowl of veg chili, and the affection of a chill therapy dog who will love you for the few seconds the milk bone you give her lasts. Bring a friend! Just for fun! - 6:30 PM1hDark UniverseAcademics | Ho Tung Visualization Lab, 401 Ho Science Center
Narrated by Neil deGrasse Tyson, Dark Universe brings audiences to the cutting edge of cosmic exploration to reveal the breakthroughs that have led astronomers to confront two great cosmic mysteries: dark matter and dark energy.In stunningly detailed scenes based on authentic scientific data — including a NASA probe’s breathtaking plunge into Jupiter’s atmosphere and novel visualizations of unobservable dark matter— Dark Universe celebrates the pivotal discoveries that have led us to greater knowledge of the universe and to new frontiers for exploration. - 6:30 PM1hDark UniverseToday's Events | Ho Tung Visualization Lab, 401 Ho Science Center
Narrated by Neil deGrasse Tyson, Dark Universe brings audiences to the cutting edge of cosmic exploration to reveal the breakthroughs that have led astronomers to confront two great cosmic mysteries: dark matter and dark energy.In stunningly detailed scenes based on authentic scientific data — including a NASA probe’s breathtaking plunge into Jupiter’s atmosphere and novel visualizations of unobservable dark matter— Dark Universe celebrates the pivotal discoveries that have led us to greater knowledge of the universe and to new frontiers for exploration. - 7:30 PM1hGeneral Information Sessions; Off-Campus Study, Fall 2025Academics | Online
Learn about study abroad options at Colgate - Extended Studies, Study Groups, and Approved Programs.OCS will describe the various programs available, discuss the application process, and review financial information related to participating in these exciting programs.This session is designed for freshman and sophomore students intending to study off campus, most often in their junior year.The upcoming Colgate application deadline for next year’s Study Groups is October 29, 2025, and the Approved Program application deadline is February 4, 2026.Learn how off-campus study can be a part of your Colgate experience! - 7:30 PM1hGeneral Information Sessions; Off-Campus Study, Fall 2025Today's Events | Online
Learn about study abroad options at Colgate - Extended Studies, Study Groups, and Approved Programs.OCS will describe the various programs available, discuss the application process, and review financial information related to participating in these exciting programs.This session is designed for freshman and sophomore students intending to study off campus, most often in their junior year.The upcoming Colgate application deadline for next year’s Study Groups is October 29, 2025, and the Approved Program application deadline is February 4, 2026.Learn how off-campus study can be a part of your Colgate experience! - 7:30 PM1hInside Pop ArtAcademics | Ho Tung Visualization Lab, 401 Ho Science Center
Dive headfirst into the vibrant world of ‘Inside Pop Art’ and experience the evolution of pop art in Shared Reality. With music that grooves to the beat of the era, this animated journey will take you from 1950s Britain to the wild art scene of 1960s New York, showcasing how rebellious artists transformed everyday objects into masterpieces. - 7:30 PM1hInside Pop ArtToday's Events | Ho Tung Visualization Lab, 401 Ho Science Center
Dive headfirst into the vibrant world of ‘Inside Pop Art’ and experience the evolution of pop art in Shared Reality. With music that grooves to the beat of the era, this animated journey will take you from 1950s Britain to the wild art scene of 1960s New York, showcasing how rebellious artists transformed everyday objects into masterpieces.