Description
In honor of Sexual Assault Awareness Month (SAAM), check out Haven, Help Restore Hope, and Shaw's library display on the 3rd floor of Case-Geyer throughout April. The display includes featured books that speak to survivorship, resiliency, healing, and action. You're invited to engage with and borrow these books and additional ones on display, make a bookmark, grab a teal awareness pin, and more.
More from Today's Events
- Apr 236:30 PMPassover SederToday's Events | James C. Colgate Hall, Hall of Presidents
Please join the Colgate Jewish Union in the celebration of the festival of freedom. All are welcome! - Apr 24All dayDenim DayToday's Events
Join the campus community in wearing denim to raise awareness on sexual assault and show support to survivors.Denim Day is an international campaign for Sexual Assault Awareness Month. Denim Day asks community members, elected officials, businesses and students to make a social statement with their fashion statement by wearing jeans on this day as a visible means of protest against the misconceptions that surround sexual violence.Peace Over Violence developed the Denim Day campaign in response to a case in Italy where the courts overturned a rape conviction because the survivor was wearing tight jeans and "must have" helped the person who raped her remove her jeans, thereby implying consent. - Apr 24All dayEclipse ArtToday's Events | Ho Science Center
In 2017, Kristen T. Woodward was able to witness a total solar eclipse in Knoxville, Tennessee, and was moved by the dramatic planetary display. She is looking forward to viewing another eclipse in her hometown of Webster, New York in April, as we will be in that exquisite path of totality. Woodward marvels at how science has allowed us to countdown the minutes while other events in our lives appear random and chaotic. The experience leaves one to ponder what is pre-ordained. By including images inspired by solar eclipse, her encaustic paintings intend to capture this conflict and visual tension between chaos and natural order.Woodward received her BFA in Printmaking from Syracuse University, and her MFA in Studio Art from Clemson University. Her zoomorphic paintings combine encaustic and print processes, and often utilize found collage materials. Woodward is a professor in the department of art and art history at Albright College, teaching drawing, painting, printmaking, and gender and the visual arts. Currently, she is collaborating with an environmental biologist to explore tropical ecosystems in Costa Rica. Woodward serves as is Resident Curator for the online site Artists2Artists. - Apr 24All daySAAM Library DisplayToday's Events | Case-Geyer Library, 3rd Floor
In honor of Sexual Assault Awareness Month (SAAM), check out Haven, Help Restore Hope, and Shaw's library display on the 3rd floor of Case-Geyer throughout April. The display includes featured books that speak to survivorship, resiliency, healing, and action. You're invited to engage with and borrow these books and additional ones on display, make a bookmark, grab a teal awareness pin, and more. - Apr 248:30 AMOpen Zazen MeditationToday's Events | Chapel House, Chapel
Designed to help you to accept and become aware of the present moment, zazen meditation is focused on being aware of every sensation simultaneously, including thoughts. This helps in finding peace in the present moment.This meditation is led by visiting Zen Buddhist teacher and scholar Jeff Shore with guidance for beginners. - Apr 249:30 AMCreative Resolve: Poisons and Passions at Longyear Museum of AnthropologyToday's Events | Alumni Hall, 2nd Floor
This exhibition, co-curated by Longyear Curatorial Assistant Summer Frazier and Curatorial Intern Raquel Marquez-Guerrero ‘24, explores the different ways that art leverages the creative process to metabolize conflict or aggression. This healing manifests in various forms, ranging from redefining narratives to empathizing with personal or communal losses. These artists, working in media from 2D to 3D to street and graffiti art, intentionally confront discontent, fostering creative growth and finding solutions. In this context, their art becomes a means to process pain and to construct bridges amidst conflict. In addition to art, this exhibition also explores various ways that plants can be used in healing processes.