Events
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2/2–5/12 Cornell Art Faculty 2024
Visit the Cornell Department of Art faculty group show connecting art practice to education at the Johnson Museum this spring.
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4/8–4/26 Alican Taylan: Strategic Landforms
Explore architectural production in French Senegal over the 19th century via reproductions of drawings made by colonial military authorities and graphic novel imagery that recounts the process of the first railway construction in West Africa.
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4/15–4/25 Catherine Wilmes: Identity Crisis
View an exhibition that broadens our understanding of standardized ubiquitous architectural elements in our built environment by rethinking their narratives.
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4/15–4/25 Zoe Vassiliou: Sleepwalker
View a collection of photographs that seek to capture a state of delirium, mysteries within and beyond the frame, dangers, delights, and superpowers.
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4/15–4/25 Il Hwan Kim: Almost Useful Tools
View an exhibition that asks what can be gained if construction tools inspired collaboration.
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4/15–4/25 Eduardo Cilleruelo Terán: Post-Lands
Experience an exhibition that introduces the processes, inquiries, and conjectures surrounding the iconography of the data center and invites visitors to assume the role of observers within the Technocene era.
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4/17–4/25 Emily Tatro: The Nightflowers Clockfigures
Visit a thesis exhibition orchestrated by the nightflower, brought into material form by the artist.
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4/17–4/25 Annamariah Knox: Circle Self / Spiral Center
View an exhibition of work that utilizes projectors, fabric, and cement forms to present circling as a strategy to be both lost and found.
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4/29–5/1 Isa Goico: Electric Lady Land
View an exhibition exploring themes of queer femininity, spirituality, and disguise.
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4/29–5/1 Sofía van Mierlo: Baila Baila
View an exhibition exploring the invigorating movement of folklórico, a traditional Mexican dance.
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4/29–5/9 Sopheak Sam: គ្រប់យ៉ាងក្នុងខ្សែភ្នែកអ្នកមិនមានខ្ញុំ (i love the way you see the world, but why can't you see me?)
View an exhibition that engages with opacity to reveal and conceal suspended fragments of time, desire, intimacy, and inheritance.
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4/29–5/9 Andy Nicholas Li and Hyunjin Park: Will-o'-the-Wisp
Through sculpture, installation, drawing, and video, view an exhibition of work that takes the will-o'-the-wisp as a figure for what is experienced and impossible to grasp but is all worth the trying.