Friday, Feb. 21, 8 p.m., Nott Memorial. The last concert in the music faculty series – “Something Old, Something New” – will be the Huntley Trio (Elizabeth Huntley, harp; Michael Emery, violin and viola; and Jan Vinci, flute) performing three
recent works by Prof. Hilary Tann as well as solos and trios by Debussy.
Saturday, March 1, 8 p.m., Memorial Chapel. The Chamber Orchestra of Europe Wind Soloists perform a program of music to include works by Janacek and Mozart in the
Schenectady Museum-Union College chamber concert series.
Through March 6, Nott Memorial. “Till We Have Faces,” an exhibit of paintings and drawings by Wonsook Kim Linton, which will be on display in the second-floor Mandeville Gallery. Many works in the exhibit were inspired by the book by C.S. Lewis of the same title. The artist's inspiration derives from her unique understanding of the relationship between self and world; East and West. The richness of her Korean youth is
continuously reaffirmed through the language of her adopted West. Her works tend to serve
as records of experience, which are drawn from various sources. They may stem from
literature, ancient myths, folklore, or the joys and sorrows of everyday life.
Through March 22, Yulman Theater. “Charles Steckler, Stage Designs” is
a 25-year retrospective of production photographs of the professor's theatrical design
work. Steckler has been resident designer at the College since 1971 and has designed over
60 productions in the Nott Memorial Theater and more recently in the Yulman Theater. A
reception with the artist will be on Thursday, Jan. 30, from 4 to 6 p.m.
Through March 30, Arts Atrium. Good Shots, photographs by and of people
with mental disabilities. Prof. Martin Benjamin directed the joint project between the
College and photographers from the Schenectady Association for Retarded Citizens. The
photographs reflect the lives of the retarded, their families and friends in unexpected
and poignant ways.