2/13/03
lectures
21 Friday
"The Power of Active Nonviolence." Janet Chisholm, Fellowship
for Peace. Noon. Latzer Hall, University YMCA. Friday Forum.
22 Saturday
"Ancient Treasures From the Sea: Two Bronze Age Shipwrecks."
George Bass, Texas A&M. 4 p.m. Knight Auditorium, Spurlock Museum,
600 S. Gregory, Urbana. Dr. Allan C. Campbell Family Distinguished Speaker
Series/Spurlock Museum.
24 Monday
"Employer–Based Retirement Plans: The Ideal, the Possible
and the Reality." Daniel Halperin, Harvard Law School. 1 p.m. College
of Law auditorium. Elder Law Lecture/Law.
"Ethics, Values and Business in the 21st Century." Steven
L. Miller, Shell Oil Co. 5:15 p.m. 114 David Kinley Hall. Leighton Lecture/Commerce
and Business Administration.
25 Tuesday
"Student Elections and Government." Lunch 11:55 a.m.; speaker
12:10 p.m. Latzer Hall, University YMCA. A forum of student candidates
for various positions involved in student government. Know Your University.
26 Wednesday
"Pictures From an Occupation: The Legacy of the Soviet Invasion
of Afghanistan." David B. Edwards, Williams College. 7:30 p.m.
Spurlock Museum auditorium, 600 S. Gregory, Urbana. CAS/MillerComm and
Anthropology.
28 Friday
"Violence and the Role of the United Nations." Badredine Arfi,
UI. Noon. Latzer Hall, University YMCA. Friday Forum.
1 Saturday
"Spike Lee, director." 7 p.m. Foellinger Auditorium. Exploring
the Human Experience/Chancellor’s Office.
4 Tuesday
"Can the UI Stop Boise-Cascade?" Rainforest Action Group.
Lunch 11:55 a.m.; speaker 12:10 p.m. Latzer Hall, University YMCA. Know
Your University.
5 Wednesday
"Mice, Monkeys and Man: The Ethical and Practical Problems of Animal
Use in Biomedical Research." Colin Blakemore, Oxford University.
7:30 p.m. Smith Hall auditorium. CAS/MillerComm, Animal Sciences, and
Molecular and Integrative Physiology.
6 Thursday
"Our Cultures, Our Selves: How the Ways We Live Shape Our Hearts
and Minds." Hazel Rose Markus, Stanford University. 8 p.m. Beckman
Institute auditorium. CAS/MillerComm and Psychology.
7 Friday
"War, Peace and Imagination." Bill Placher, Wabash College.
Noon. Latzer Hall, University YMCA. Friday Forum.
colloquia
20 Thursday
"Art and Politics at War: Reading Eisenstein’s ‘Ivan
the Terrible.’ " Joan Neuberger, University of Texas. 4-5:30
p.m. 101 International Studies Building. Russian and East European Center.
"Performance of Arthurian Plays at a 1275 Tournament (Sarrasin,
Le Roman du Hem)." Nancy Regalado, New York University. 1 p.m.
4080A Foreign Languages Building. Program in Medieval Studies.
21 Friday
"Single Molecule Dynamics of DNA Recombination Intermediates."
Taekjip Ha, UI. Noon. B102 Chemical and Life Sciences auditorium. Biochemistry.
24 Monday
"A Comparison of Development Approaches Over Time and the Consequences
on Gender Considerations." Earl Kellogg, UI. Noon. 101 International
Studies Building. Women and Gender in Global Perspectives.
"Aestheticizing Dissent: Mechthild of Magdeburg and the Art of
Devotion." Sara Poor, Princeton University. 3 p.m. 2090B Foreign
Languages Building. Medieval Studies.
"The Ribosome in Motion: Explicit Solvent Simulation of the 70S
Ribosome." Kevin Y. Sanbonmatsu, Los Alamos National Laboratory.
3 p.m. 3269 Beckman Institute. Theoretical and Computational Biophysics
Group/Beckman Institute.
"Retinol-Binding Protein: A Practical Application and a Physiological
Function." William Blaner, Columbia University. 4 p.m. 150 Animal
Sciences Lab. Nutritional Sciences.
"Towards a Programming and Execution Model for Cascade." Hans
P. Zima, NASA Jet Propulsion Lab, Pasadena, Calif. and University of
Vienna, Austria. 4 p.m. 1320 Digital Computer Lab. Computer Science.
25 Tuesday
"Forming a Start-up Company at UIUC: A New Mindset." John
Parks, UI. Noon. 3269 Beckman Institute. Imaging Technology Group/Beckman
Institute.
"Mobilization Without Preconditions? How Anti-Americanism Shapes
Islamism in Central Asia." Ed Schatz, Southern Illinois University.
Noon. 101 International Studies Building. Russian and East European
Center.
"The Turbo Principle in Communications Systems." Joachim Hagenauer,
Technische Universitat Munchen. 4 p.m. B02 Coordinated Science Laboratory.
Coordinated Science Lab.
26 Wednesday
"Survey Sampling." Karen Retzer, UI. Noon-1:20 p.m. 106 Lincoln
Hall. Survey Research Laboratory.
"Application of Micro- and Nanotechnology to Solve Problems in
Biology." 4 p.m. Monsanto Multimedia Studio, ACES Library. Nanoscale
Science and Technology.
"The Future of Civil Society in Afghanistan." David Edwards,
Williams College. 4 p.m. 356 Armory Building. Arms Control, Disarmament
and International Security.
3 Monday
"Financial Resources and Women Micro-Entrepreneurs in Peru."
Angelina Cotler, UI. Noon. 101 International Studies Building. Women
and Gender in Global Perspectives.
"Early 18th Century Art: England, Venice, Germany."
Noon. Trees Gallery, Krannert Art Museum. Marcel Franciscono, UI. Krannert
Art Museum.
"The Textual I. Literary Self-Appropriations of Female Spiritual
Masters." Hildegard Keller, University of Zurich. 3 p.m. 2090B
Foreign Languages Building. Medieval Studies.
"High-Performance Web Crawling." Marc Najork, Microsoft Research,
Mountain View, Calif. 4 p.m. 1320 Digital Computer Lab. Computer Science.
"Second Skin? Transsexualism, Image and Desire." Nancy Blake,
Anke Pinkert and Miguel Malagreca, UI. 8 p.m. Levis Faculty Center.
Criticism and Interpretive Theory.
4 Tuesday
"Multi-Microphone, Multi-Speaker, Human-Computer Interface."
Mark Hasegawa-Johnson, UI. Noon. 3269 Beckman Institute. Imaging Technology
Group/Beckman Institute.
5 Wednesday
"Vasari’s Mothers." Jeryldene Wood, UI. Noon. Women’s
Studies Building, 911 S. Sixth St., Champaign. Women’s Studies.
"Web Surveys." Ingrid Graf, UI. Noon-1:20 p.m. 106 Lincoln
Hall. Survey Research Laboratory.
"Sovereignty, Culture and Technology: Taiwan and the Mainland Grapple
With the Nation-State in the 21st Century." Emanuel Pastreich,
UI. 4 p.m. 356 Armory Building. Arms Control, Disarmament and International
Security.
"Will America’s Fast Food Addiction Break Our Hearts? Dietary
Manipulation of Cardiomyopathy in PPARalpha Over-Expressing Mice."
Brian Finck, Washington University, St. Louis. 4 p.m. 150 Animal Sciences
Lab. Nutritional Sciences.
6 Thursday
"Of Traditional Practices and Innovative Premises: History, Documents
and Digitization." Brenda Trofanenko, UI. Noon. 242 Education Building.
Bureau of Educational Research.
"Gentle Bridges: George Steinmann’s Contemporary Art Projects
in Estonia and Russia." George Steinmann, independent artist, Switzerland.
4-5:30 p.m. 101 International Studies Building. Russian and East European
Center.
7 Friday
"Kashmir: The Prospect of War and Peace." Sumit Ganguly, University
of Texas. 4 p.m. 356 Armory Building. Arms Control, Disarmament and
International Security.
theater
20 Thursday
"Tales of the Lost Formicans." Lisa Gay Dixon, director. 8
p.m. Studio Theater, Krannert Center. A new comedy about the American
Dream narrated by a group of alien archaeologists, this play follows
a suburban family sliding into dysfunction. Adult themes and strong
language. Admission charge.
21 Friday
"Tales of the Lost Formicans." Lisa Gay Dixon, director. 8
p.m. Studio Theater, Krannert Center. Adult themes and strong language.
Admission charge.
22 Saturday
"Tales of the Lost Formicans." Lisa Gay Dixon, director. 8
p.m. Studio Theater, Krannert Center. Adult themes and strong language.
Admission charge.
23 Sunday
"Tales of the Lost Formicans." Lisa Gay Dixon, director. 3
p.m. Studio Theater, Krannert Center. Adult themes and strong language.
Admission charge.
27 Thursday
"Arcadia." Robert Anderson, director. 8 p.m. Colwell Playhouse,
Krannert Center. An English country estate provides the setting for
this comedy of wit, intellect and emotion. Waltzing backward and forward
in time from 1809 to the present, the play follows a love story and
a mystery across centuries. Admission charge.
28 Friday
"Arcadia." Robert Anderson, director. 8 p.m. Colwell Playhouse,
Krannert Center. Dessert and Conversation:
7 p.m. Krannert Room. Admission charge.
1 Saturday
"Arcadia." Robert Anderson, director. 8 p.m. Colwell Playhouse,
Krannert Center. Admission charge.
4 Tuesday
"Lord of the Dance." 7:30 p.m. Assembly Hall. This performance
integrates many different dance styles, including gypsy, disco, flamenco
and ballet. Admission charge. News-Gazette Broadway Series.
6 Thursday
"Arcadia." Robert Anderson, director. 8 p.m. Colwell Playhouse,
Krannert Center. Admission charge.
7 Friday
"Arcadia." Robert Anderson, director. 8 p.m. Colwell Playhouse,
Krannert Center. Admission charge.
8 Saturday
"Arcadia." Robert Anderson, director. 8 p.m. Colwell Playhouse,
Krannert Center. Admission charge.
9 Sunday
"Arcadia." Robert Anderson, director. 3 p.m. Colwell Playhouse,
Krannert Center. Dessert and Conversation:
2 p.m. Krannert Room. Admission charge.
music
20 Thursday
Graduate Recital. Waejane Chen, piano. 8 p.m. Recital Hall, Smith Hall.
21 Friday
UI Symphonic Band II and UI Concert Band I. Peter Griffin and Kenneth
Steinsultz, conductors. 8 p.m. Foellinger Great Hall, Krannert Center.
A variety of works from the symphonic and concert band repertoires.
Admission charge. School of Music.
22 Saturday
Illini Jazz Festival. Chip McNeill, coordinator. 8 a.m. Music Building
and Smith Hall. An invitational jazz festival for high school jazz bands.
The day culminates in a concert with the UI Concert Jazz Band at 8 p.m.
in the Music Building auditorium. School of Music.
23 Sunday
Illini Symphony. Jack Ranney, conductor. 3 p.m. Foellinger Great Hall,
Krannert Center. With Robert Mirakian, student conductor, and Ricardo
Flores, snare drum. This concert features a wide variety of works by
Tchaikovsky, Prokofiev and Sommerlatti. Admission charge. School of
Music.
Armstrong Competition Recital. 3 p.m. Recital Hall, Smith Hall. Performances
by laureates in the competition for the John D. and Fern Hodge Armstrong
Outstanding Undergraduate Performance Award.
Doctor of Musical Arts Recital. Alison Robuck, oboe. 4 p.m. Memorial
Room, Smith Hall.
"Kenny Chesney: Senoritas ’n’ Margaritas Tour 2003."
7:30 p.m. Assembly Hall. With special guest Montgomery Gentry and Kellie
Coffey. Admission charge.
24 Monday
UI New Music Ensemble. Zack Browning and Stephen Taylor, co-directors.
8 p.m. Recital Hall, Smith Hall. Program will feature works by student
composers.
25 Tuesday
Voice Division Recital. 11 a.m. Recital Hall, Smith Hall.
Guest Artist Master Class. Allen Vizzuti, trumpet. 5 p.m. 141 Harding
Band Building.
UI Chamber Orchestra. Donald Schleicher, conductor, and James F. Keene,
guest conductor. 8 p.m. Recital Hall, Smith Hall. Works by Stravinsky,
Milhaud and Dvorak.
26 Wednesday
Doctor of Musical Arts Recital. David Diamond, trumpet. 2 p.m. Recital
Hall, Smith Hall.
21st Century Piano Commission Award Concert. Jeff Morton, composer.
8 p.m. Foellinger Great Hall, Krannert Center. With Maria Cueva-Mendez
and Sharon Hudson, piano. Morton’s award-winning composition references
both Debussy and Schubert. Admission charge. School of Music.
27 Thursday
Doctor of Musical Arts Recital. Hye-Wook Chung, piano. 11:15 a.m. Recital
Hall, Smith Hall.
Graduate Recital. Alda Dizdari, violin. 7 p.m. Recital Hall, Smith Hall.
UI Faculty Composers Concert. UI New Music Ensemble. Zack Browning and
Stephen Taylor, co-directors. 8 p.m. Foellinger Great Hall, Krannert
Center. An eclectic mix of works for voices, instruments and electronics
by the composition faculty at the UI. Admission charge. School of Music.
28 Friday
Concert Prep: Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Kevin Kelly, speaker. 7:15
p.m. AV Room, Krannert Center. Introductory remarks about the music
being performed by the Orchestra.
Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Daniel Barenboim, music director. 8 p.m.
Foellinger Great Hall, Krannert Center. With Nikolaj Znaider, violin.
The program includes Mendelssohn’s the "Italian" Symphony,
Szymanowski’s Violin Concerto No. 1 and Haydn’s "Mourning"
Symphony. (No. 44). Admission charge.
Guest Artist Recital. Ian Pace, piano. 8 p.m. Recital Hall, Smith Hall.
Program will include works of UI faculty members William Brooks and
Erik Lund.
1 Saturday
Bill Gaither and Homecoming Friends. 6 p.m. Assembly Hall. "Let
Freedom Ring Tour."
2 Sunday
Viviane Hagner, violin. 3 p.m. Foellinger Great Hall, Krannert Center.
With Tatiana Goncharova, piano. Program includes works by Beethoven,
Elgar, Ravel and Tchaikovsky. Admission charge.
Undergraduate Recital. Chris Barnum, euphonium, and Ryan Sykes, clarinet.
3 p.m. Music Building auditorium.
Faculty Recital. Michael Cameron, double bass. 7 p.m. Memorial Room,
Smith Hall. Program will include works of J.S. Bach, Henze and Morton.
3 Monday
Concerto Concert. 8 p.m. Recital Hall, Smith Hall. Student winners of
the 2003 School of Music Piano Concerto. Admission charge.
4 Tuesday
Doctor of Musical Arts Project Recital. David Steinau, tenor. 8 p.m.
Recital Hall, Smith Hall.
5 Wednesday
Faculty Recital. Peter Schaffer, violin. 8 p.m. Foellinger Great Hall,
Krannert Center. Works for violin and guitar by Paganini. Admission
charge. School of Music.
6 Thursday
Concerto Urbano. Charlotte Mattax, director and harpsichord. 8 p.m.
Foellinger Great Hall, Krannert Center. With guest harpsichord artists
Karyl Louwenaar, Sonia Lee, Ying Chen and Kerry Heimann. Admission charge.
School of Music.
Master of Music Recital. Erica Muller, soprano. 8 p.m. Recital Hall,
Smith Hall.
8 Saturday
Undergraduate Recital. Katherine Reiner, viola. 1 p.m. Memorial Room,
Smith Hall.
Brass Quintet Recital. Green Street Brass Quintet. 2 p.m. Music Building
auditorium. Matthew Wlezien and Paul Gilkerson, trumpet; Derek Justin
Wright, horn; Ryan Ross, trombone; and Benjamin Helton, tuba.
Advocates for Young Artists Scholarship Recital. 4 p.m. Recital Hall,
Smith Hall. Winners of the Advocates for Young Artists Scholarships
will perform with various divisions of the School of Music.
Undergraduate Recital. Joseph Tomasso and Steven Walker, saxophone.
5 p.m. Music Building auditorium.
Master of Music Recital. Alyssa Storm, soprano. 8 p.m. Recital Hall,
Smith Hall.
Senior Recital. Jessica Bayliss, euphonium. 8 p.m. Music Building auditorium.
9 Sunday
Undergraduate Recital. Jocelyn Ho, piano. 10 a.m. Recital Hall, Smith
Hall.
Undergraduate Recital. Stephanie Silosky and Jessica Lindeman, clarinet.
1 p.m. Recital Hall, Smith Hall.
Second Sunday Concert. Ensemble Choragos. Fred Stoltzfus, conductor.
2 p.m. Krannert Art Museum. Broadcast live on sponsoring station WILL-FM
(90.9).
Music Education Senior Recital/Undergraduate Recital. Jason Swanson
and David Loken, trumpet. 3 p.m. Music Building auditorium.
Senior Recital. David Husser, piano. 4 p.m. Recital Hall, Smith Hall.
Undergraduate Recital. Thomas Parker, bassoon. 4 p.m. Memorial Room,
Smith Hall.
Doctor of Musical Arts Accompanying Recital. Jerold Siena, tenor, and
Jeffrey Peterson, piano. 7 p.m. Recital Hall, Smith Hall.
Student Chamber Music Recital. 7 p.m. Memorial Room, Smith Hall. Waejane
Chen, piano; Andrew McCann, violin; Diana Flesner, cello; and Maria
Cueva-Mendez, piano.
opera
21 Friday
"Hansel and Gretel." Steven Crawford, conductor; Stephen Fiol,
director; and Rebecca Nettl-Fiol, choreographer. 8 p.m. Tryon Festival
Theater, Krannert Center. Music by Engelbert Humperdinck; libretto by
Adeleid Wette. Based on a fairy tale by the Grimm brothers, folk-like
dances and memorable melodies, coupled with joyous singing, reflect
the triumph of good over evil. Sung in English. Admission charge. School
of Music.
22 Saturday
"Hansel and Gretel." Steven Crawford, conductor; Stephen Fiol,
director; and Rebecca Nettl-Fiol, choreographer. 8 p.m. Tryon Festival
Theater, Krannert Center. Music by Engelbert Humperdinck; libretto by
Adeleid Wette. Sung in English. Admission charge. School of Music.
1 Saturday
"Hansel and Gretel." Steven Crawford, conductor; Stephen Fiol,
director; and Rebecca Nettl-Fiol, choreographer. 8 p.m. Tryon Festival
Theater, Krannert Center. Music by Engelbert Humperdinck; libretto by
Adeleid Wette. Sung in English. Admission charge. School of Music.
2 Sunday
"Hansel and Gretel." Steven Crawford, conductor; Stephen Fiol,
director; and Rebecca Nettl-Fiol, choreographer. 3 p.m. Tryon Festival
Theater, Krannert Center. Music by Engelbert Humperdinck; libretto by
Adeleid Wette. Sung in English. Admission charge. School of Music.
dance
6 Thursday
Studiodance I. 8 p.m. Studio Theater, Krannert Center. A concert of
work by graduating MFA candidates Young-mi Cho, Elizabeth Johnson, Kristy
Kuhn, Ya-ju Lin and Cho-ying Tsai, choreographic inspiration ranges
from baseball to exaggerated femininity to fun with chairs on wheels.
Admission charge.
7 Friday
Studiodance I. 7 and 9 p.m. Studio Theater, Krannert Center. Admission
charge.
8 Saturday
Studiodance I. 7 and 9 p.m. Studio Theater, Krannert Center. Admission
charge.
Tango Buenos Aires: The Golden Age of the Tango. Fernando Marzan, music
director and piano. 8 p.m. Foellinger Great Hall, Krannert Center. With
Osvaldo Daniel Ruggiero, bandoneón. Tracing the rise of tango
from its tenement beginnings to the dance sensation it has become, a
six-piece orchestra shares the stage with six dancing couples. Admission
charge.
9 Sunday
Tango Buenos Aires: The Golden Age of the Tango. Fernando Marzan, music
director and piano. 3 p.m. Foellinger Great Hall, Krannert Center. With
Osvaldo Daniel Ruggiero, bandoneón. Admission charge.
films
26 Wednesday
"Chutney Popcorn." 5:30 p.m. 62 Krannert Art Museum. Illinois
Program for Research in the Humanities and Women’s Studies.
5 Wednesday
"O Brother, Where Art Thou?." 5:30 p.m. 62 Krannert Art Museum.
Illinois Program for Research in the Humanities.
sports
23 Sunday
Women’s Tennis. UI vs. Duke University. 11 a.m. Atkins Tennis
Center.
Wrestling. UI vs. Michigan State University. 1 p.m. Huff Hall.
25 Tuesday
Men’s Basketball. UI vs. Indiana University. 8 p.m. Assembly Hall.
Admission charge.
27 Thursday
Women’s
Basketball. UI vs. Northwestern University.
7 p.m. Assembly Hall. Admission charge.
1 Saturday
Men’s Gymnastics. UI vs. University of Iowa and Pennsylvania State
University. 7 p.m. Huff Hall. Admission charge.
Men’s Track and Field. Big Ten Indoor Championships. 10:30 a.m.
UI Armory Track. Admission charge.
2 Sunday
Men’s Track and Field. Big Ten Indoor Championships. 10:30 a.m.
UI Armory Track. Admission charge.
Men’s Tennis. UI vs. University of Miami. 1 p.m. Atkins Tennis
Center.
Women’s Tennis. UI vs. Wake Forest. 10 a.m. Atkins Tennis Center.
7 Friday
Men’s Tennis. UI vs. University of Wisconsin. 4 p.m. Atkins Tennis
Center.
8 Saturday
Men’s Tennis. UI vs. Northwestern University. 6 p.m. Atkins Tennis
Center.
Women’s Gymnastics. UI vs. University of Iowa. 2 p.m. Huff Hall.
Admission charge.
Men’s Basketball. UI vs. University of Minnesota. Time: TBA. Admission
charge.
et cetera
23 Sunday
"Native Plants in the Garden." 2-4 p.m. Visitor Center, Allerton
Park. Allerton Park and Conference Center.
26 Wednesday
"Local Planning Matters: How to Respond to Statewide Planning Assistance
Acts." 8:30 a.m. 407 Illini Union. Continues Thursday. Urban and
Regional Planning.
1 Saturday
"Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Conference. 9 a.m.-8 p.m.
University YMCA. Keynote speaker: Dan Chiras, University of Colorado.
Other participants include: Don Wuebbles, Lee DeBaillie, Brian Metcalf,
Mark Burger, Phil Stiles, Emily Heaton and Daianna Rincones. For more
information and to register, go to http://www.uiuc.edu/ro/secs or send e-mail to jwalling@illinois.edu.
Students for Environmental Concerns.
3 Monday
"War Photographer." James Nachtwey, photo journalist. 7 p.m.
100 Gregory Hall. Exploring the Human Experience/Chancellor’s
Office.
5 Wednesday
Gallery talk: "Behind the Scenes with the Curators of ‘Creativity
in Print.’ " 4:30 p.m. Light Court, Krannert Art Museum.
Krannert Art Museum.
7 Friday
"March Ally Meeting." Noon-1:30 p.m. 405 Illini Union. Counseling
Center.
8 Saturday
"Who is Primitive? Multicultural Inspiration in Adolph Gottlieb’s
Pictographs." Michael Conner, UI. 9 a.m.-noon. Krannert Art Museum.
"The Virtual Mummy: Using Computer Imaging to Decipher the Past."
4 p.m. Knight Auditorium, Spurlock Museum, 600 S. Gregory St., Urbana.
Sarah Wisseman, UI. A reception and book signing will follow the talk.
Admission is free but tickets are required and are available at the
museum’s information desk. For more information, go to http://www.spurlock.uiuc.edu
or call 333-2360. Spurlock Museum Guild Performance and Lecture Series.
9 Sunday
Second Sunday Gallery Tour. "The Idea of Landscape in the Western
Tradition: Works From the Permanent Collection." Rachel DeLue,
UI. 1 p.m. Krannert Art Museum. Krannert Art Museum.
exhibits
"NAFTA: Mexico, United States of North America and Canada"
Latin American and Caribbean Library.
"Mobility of Black America"
Government Documents Library, main hall, wall cases.
"Celebrating Black History Month"
Main hall display cases, Library.
Through Feb. 28.
"Epigraph for a Condemned Book"
Rare Book and Special Collections Library.
Through March 27, 2003.
"Bronze Age Trade in the Ancient Mediterranean"
Through Aug. 31.
"UI Museum of Natural History"
"Horowitz Collection of Brass Rubbings"
Five galleries featuring the cultures of the world.
Spurlock Museum, 600 S. Gregory St., Urbana.
Noon-8 p.m. Tuesday; 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Wednesday-Friday;
10 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday.
"New Acquisitions 2000-2002"
Through March 23.
"The Beginning of Seeing: Tribal Art and the Pictographs of Adolph
Gottlieb"
Featured Works. "Creativity in Print: Artistic Interactions Through
the Work of Edward Weston"
"The Idea of Landscape in the Western Tradition: Works From the
Permanent Collection"
Through April 13.
"Art and Conflict: The Image of War in 20th Century Art"
Through May 18.
Krannert Art Museum and Kinkead Pavilion. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Tuesday, Thursday–Saturday;
9 a.m.-8 p.m. Wednesday; 2-5 p.m. Sunday. Admission to the museum is
free; a donation of $3 is suggested.
"Inalterable Dreams: The People and Architecture of Chinese Folk
Environments"
"Each/Other: Vanishing Point"
Through March 8.
I space, 230 S. Superior St., Chicago. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday.o
@art gallery. Online exhibit of the UI School of Art and Design.
This calendar is excerpted from the Feb. 20 issue of Inside Illinois,
the faculty-staff newspaper at the UI.