Results tagged: Adults

Vân-Ánh Võ’s Blood Moon Orchestra

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Friday, Mar 31, 2023
7 p.m.

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Free with general admission

*General museum admission is FREE for residents of Wayne, Oakland, and Macomb counties.

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

Vân-Ánh Võ’s Blood Moon Orchestra (BMO) is a genre-bending musical collective that defies the bounds of Vietnamese traditional music. All master musicians, members of BMO have an innate ability to blend very different sounds together, creating surprisingly new and fresh musical dialogues.  

Emmy Award-winning composer and multi-instrumentalist Vân-Ánh Võ has collaborated with Kronos Quartet, Yo-Yo Ma and presented her music frequently at The Kennedy Center, Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Center. 

This program is made possible by a grant from the Freeman Foundation

Vân-Ánh Võ’s Blood Moon Orchestra

Vân-Ánh Võ’s Blood Moon Orchestra (BMO) is a genre-bending musical collective that defies the bounds of Vietnamese traditional music. All master musicians, members of BMO have an innate ability to blend very different sounds together, creating surprisingly new and fresh musical dialogues.  

Emmy Award-winning composer and multi-instrumentalist Vân-Ánh Võ has collaborated with Kronos Quartet, Yo-Yo Ma and presented her music frequently at The Kennedy Center, Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Center. 

This program is made possible by a grant from the Freeman Foundation

Ceramics from the Islamic World at the DIA: A History in Fragments

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Tuesday, Apr 4, 2023
6 p.m.

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Free with registration

*Please register at the link above to reserve your spot in advance.

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

Scholars have long known the importance of the DIA to the study of Islamic Art in North America. The DIA employed one of the first dedicated curators of Islamic art in the country, Mehmet Aga-Oglu, and mounted its first exhibition of Islamic art in 1930 with loans from all the major dealers of the time. The formation of the DIA collections in Islamic art is a more complicated story, taking place through many stages.

In this lecture, Dr. Margaret S. Graves, Associate Professor of Islamic Art at Indiana University, will explore the important collections of ceramics from the Islamic world held in the Institute today.

It will also examine the skilled craftsmanship that saw some pieces of ceramic art remade and reinvented for the market as they traveled to the new world of the twentieth-century United States.

 

Margaret S. Graves is Associate Professor of Islamic Art in the Department of Art History at Indiana University, Bloomington. She is currently in residence at the Clark Art Institute as a 2022-23 research fellow, writing a book called Invisible Hands: Islamic Ceramics on the Colonial Art Market.

Ceramic Bowl - Islamic

Scholars have long known the importance of the DIA to the study of Islamic Art in North America. The DIA employed one of the first dedicated curators of Islamic art in the country, Mehmet Aga-Oglu, and mounted its first exhibition of Islamic art in 1930 with loans from all the major dealers of the time. The formation of the DIA collections in Islamic art is a more complicated story, taking place through many stages.

In this lecture, Dr. Margaret S. Graves, Associate Professor of Islamic Art at Indiana University, will explore the important collections of ceramics from the Islamic world held in the Institute today.

It will also examine the skilled craftsmanship that saw some pieces of ceramic art remade and reinvented for the market as they traveled to the new world of the twentieth-century United States.

 

Margaret S. Graves is Associate Professor of Islamic Art in the Department of Art History at Indiana University, Bloomington. She is currently in residence at the Clark Art Institute as a 2022-23 research fellow, writing a book called Invisible Hands: Islamic Ceramics on the Colonial Art Market.

Life to the Limit

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Monday, Mar 20, 2023
7 p.m.

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Free with general admission

*General museum admission is FREE for residents of Wayne, Oakland, and Macomb counties.

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

Ukraine/ 2022-Directed By Pavlo Peleshok

The Detroit Film Theatre in partnership with the Ukrainian National Women’s League of America (UNWLA) Detroit Regional Council and the Ukrainian-American Civic Committee of Metropolitan Detroit (UACC) will host a screening of the new documentary Life to the Limit, which tells the story of Ukrainian resistance against Russia's attempts to colonize and eradicate their country and society.

From the producers of Winter on Fire, an Academy Award-nominated film for Best Documentary, Life to the Limit is the first Ukrainian documentary to address the complete history of Russia's war on Ukraine from 2013 to 2022. Director Pavlo Peleshok and producer Yurko Ivanyshyn trace the formation and evolution of Ukrainian resistance to Russian aggression, beginning during the Revolution of Dignity in 2014 and leading to the full-scale war on Ukraine in 2022.

Now, both war veterans, Peleshok and Ivanyshyn joined the Ukrainian resistance at the time of Russia’s illegal and unrecognized annexation of Crimea and the Russian invasion of eastern Ukraine in 2014. They defended Ukrainian soil and freedom, while simultaneously documenting the causes and consequences of the war by assembling a mosaic from more than 640 hours of archival materials.

Director Pavlo Peleshok will be present to introduce the screening.
 

A metal lighter being lit in the palm of an open, dusty hand.

Ukraine/ 2022-Directed By Pavlo Peleshok

The Detroit Film Theatre in partnership with the Ukrainian National Women’s League of America (UNWLA) Detroit Regional Council and the Ukrainian-American Civic Committee of Metropolitan Detroit (UACC) will host a screening of the new documentary Life to the Limit, which tells the story of Ukrainian resistance against Russia's attempts to colonize and eradicate their country and society.

From the producers of Winter on Fire, an Academy Award-nominated film for Best Documentary, Life to the Limit is the first Ukrainian documentary to address the complete history of Russia's war on Ukraine from 2013 to 2022. Director Pavlo Peleshok and producer Yurko Ivanyshyn trace the formation and evolution of Ukrainian resistance to Russian aggression, beginning during the Revolution of Dignity in 2014 and leading to the full-scale war on Ukraine in 2022.

Now, both war veterans, Peleshok and Ivanyshyn joined the Ukrainian resistance at the time of Russia’s illegal and unrecognized annexation of Crimea and the Russian invasion of eastern Ukraine in 2014. They defended Ukrainian soil and freedom, while simultaneously documenting the causes and consequences of the war by assembling a mosaic from more than 640 hours of archival materials.

Director Pavlo Peleshok will be present to introduce the screening.
 

Friday Night Live! Florent Ghys

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Friday, Mar 17, 2023
7 p.m.

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Free with general admission

*General museum admission is FREE for residents of Wayne, Oakland, and Macomb counties.

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

French double bass player and composer Florent Ghys performs his new double album "Ritournelles & Mosaïques" in a solo for double bass, electronics, and video.

Florent’s album has been described by French journalist Melanie Bauer (France Inter) as “a massage for the brain” and Alex Ross (The New Yorker) said that his videos “have rightfully attained viral fame.” 

Florent Ghys pictured with his bass in a orange baseball cap in front of an orange background.

French double bass player and composer Florent Ghys performs his new double album "Ritournelles & Mosaïques" in a solo for double bass, electronics, and video.

Florent’s album has been described by French journalist Melanie Bauer (France Inter) as “a massage for the brain” and Alex Ross (The New Yorker) said that his videos “have rightfully attained viral fame.” 

Friends of Art & Flowers 23rd Elizabeth Sites Kuhlman Lecture

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Monday, Apr 24, 2023
10:30 a.m. – 12 p.m.

Lecture tickets
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Monday, Apr 24, 2023
1:30 – 2 p.m.

Lecture + luncheon tickets
Lecture $40
Luncheon $40

*Registration required, FAF members have early access.

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

Contrasts of Expression - Dramatic Minimalism to Classically Elegant Floral Design

World Cup Champion, Bart Hassam, demonstrates his mastery of the architectural botanical form and his love for the classically elegant decorative forms of floristry. 

Bart Hassam

Contrasts of Expression - Dramatic Minimalism to Classically Elegant Floral Design

World Cup Champion, Bart Hassam, demonstrates his mastery of the architectural botanical form and his love for the classically elegant decorative forms of floristry. 

The Artist is Human: A. I. Won’t Break My Soul, Artist Lecture by Michael Menchaca

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Wednesday, Mar 15, 2023
6 p.m.

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Free with general admission

*General museum admission is FREE for residents of Wayne, Oakland, and Macomb counties.

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

Michael Menchaca (they/them) is an interdisciplinary Xicanx artist using print and new media to generate anti-colonial, anti-racist, and anti-capitalist visions of the world. In the talk, “The Artist is Human: A.I. Won’t Break My Soul,” Menchaca will discuss the A.I. industry, text-to-image generators like Image GPT and large language models like ChatGPT and the cultural implications. 

This talk is organized in conjunction with the exhibition Printmaking in the Twenty-First Century. Support for the talk comes from the DIA’s Friends of Prints, Drawings and Photographs. 

The talk is free and open to the public. 

 

Image: Michael Menchaca, Castizo no. 2, 2019, from the suite, La Raza Cósmica 20XX, 2019, screen print. Detroit Institute of Arts, Museum Purchase, Friends of PDP Photographic Fund in honor of Lindsey Buhl, 2021.249.2. 

Image: Michael Menchaca, Castizo no. 2, 2019, from the suite, La Raza Cósmica 20XX, 2019, screen print. Detroit Institute of Arts, Museum Purchase, Friends of PDP Photographic Fund in honor of Lindsey Buhl, 2021.249.2.

Michael Menchaca (they/them) is an interdisciplinary Xicanx artist using print and new media to generate anti-colonial, anti-racist, and anti-capitalist visions of the world. In the talk, “The Artist is Human: A.I. Won’t Break My Soul,” Menchaca will discuss the A.I. industry, text-to-image generators like Image GPT and large language models like ChatGPT and the cultural implications. 

This talk is organized in conjunction with the exhibition Printmaking in the Twenty-First Century. Support for the talk comes from the DIA’s Friends of Prints, Drawings and Photographs. 

The talk is free and open to the public. 

 

Image: Michael Menchaca, Castizo no. 2, 2019, from the suite, La Raza Cósmica 20XX, 2019, screen print. Detroit Institute of Arts, Museum Purchase, Friends of PDP Photographic Fund in honor of Lindsey Buhl, 2021.249.2. 

30th Annual Alain Locke Awards

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Saturday, Feb 25, 2023
5:30 – 7 p.m.

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Free with registration

*Registration is currently available for members of DIA Auxiliary group FAAAA.

Location:

In the Museum

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

The Friends of African and African American Art present the 30th Annual Alain Locke Awards on Saturday, February 25th at 5:30 p.m. in Kresge Reception. The award ceremony will honor artists Ming Smith and Henry Heading.   

The Alain Locke International Award will be presented this year to Detroit-born photographer Ming Smith, known for her black and white street photography depicting various aspects of humanity.  Smith was the first woman to become a member of the Kamoinge Workshop, founded in 1963, a collective of Black photographers documenting Black life in New York, which is still active today. By the late 1970s, she had become the first African American female photographer whose work was acquired by the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA) in New York City.  In 2023, Smith was selected as one of the recipients of The International Center of Photography’s Infinity Awards honoring outstanding achievements in photography. Currently, her art is being exhibited at MOMA. Valerie Mercer, curator and department head of African American Art at the DIA, will lead Smith in a conversation about her photography and career.    

The local Alain Locke Recognition Award will be presented to Detroit artist Henry Heading. A longtime member of the Detroit Fine Arts Breakfast Club, Heading’s realistic paintings feature African American celebrities and everyday people of interest to him.  

 

Ming Smith pictured in front of the Detroit city skyline

The Friends of African and African American Art present the 30th Annual Alain Locke Awards on Saturday, February 25th at 5:30 p.m. in Kresge Reception. The award ceremony will honor artists Ming Smith and Henry Heading.   

The Alain Locke International Award will be presented this year to Detroit-born photographer Ming Smith, known for her black and white street photography depicting various aspects of humanity.  Smith was the first woman to become a member of the Kamoinge Workshop, founded in 1963, a collective of Black photographers documenting Black life in New York, which is still active today. By the late 1970s, she had become the first African American female photographer whose work was acquired by the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA) in New York City.  In 2023, Smith was selected as one of the recipients of The International Center of Photography’s Infinity Awards honoring outstanding achievements in photography. Currently, her art is being exhibited at MOMA. Valerie Mercer, curator and department head of African American Art at the DIA, will lead Smith in a conversation about her photography and career.    

The local Alain Locke Recognition Award will be presented to Detroit artist Henry Heading. A longtime member of the Detroit Fine Arts Breakfast Club, Heading’s realistic paintings feature African American celebrities and everyday people of interest to him.  

 

The Conformist (new restoration)

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Saturday, Apr 8, 2023
3 p.m.

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Saturday, Apr 8, 2023
7 p.m.

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Sunday, Apr 9, 2023
2 p.m.

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Sunday, Apr 9, 2023
4:30 p.m.

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General admission $9.50
Senior, Students, and DIA Members $7.50

+$1.50 online convenience fee

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

Italy/1971—directed by Bernardo Bertolucci | 110 minutes

In Mussolini’s Italy of the 1930s, Marcello (the great Jean-Louis Trintignant of My Night at Maud’s and Amour) is so desperate to fit in with those around him that he’s willing not only to become a fascist and a murderer but also to deny his own desires in order to blend into the regime’s version of “normal.”

Bertolucci’s masterpiece is a visual and aural feast – it’s almost as if all the sensuality and passion the protagonist is repressing explodes onto the screen via richly the richly colorful and fluid cinematography of Vittorio Storaro (Apocalypse Now) and the evocative, memorable musical score by the great Georges Delerue (Jules and Jim, The Last Métro).

Classically elegant while thematically subversive, The Conformist is a seminal filmgoing experience, more stunning than ever in this brand-new 4K restoration. With Dominique Sanda and Stefania Sandrelli. In Italian with English subtitles.

“A rejuvenating jolt of youthful creative energy… a time when movies were the most important art and their creative possibilities seemed endless.”   –Dave Kehr, The New York Times

A man in a trench coat and a hat stands with his back to the viewer as a woman, similarly dressed with a cheetah print handbag, points her hand out towards him and stares.

Italy/1971—directed by Bernardo Bertolucci | 110 minutes

In Mussolini’s Italy of the 1930s, Marcello (the great Jean-Louis Trintignant of My Night at Maud’s and Amour) is so desperate to fit in with those around him that he’s willing not only to become a fascist and a murderer but also to deny his own desires in order to blend into the regime’s version of “normal.”

Bertolucci’s masterpiece is a visual and aural feast – it’s almost as if all the sensuality and passion the protagonist is repressing explodes onto the screen via richly the richly colorful and fluid cinematography of Vittorio Storaro (Apocalypse Now) and the evocative, memorable musical score by the great Georges Delerue (Jules and Jim, The Last Métro).

Classically elegant while thematically subversive, The Conformist is a seminal filmgoing experience, more stunning than ever in this brand-new 4K restoration. With Dominique Sanda and Stefania Sandrelli. In Italian with English subtitles.

“A rejuvenating jolt of youthful creative energy… a time when movies were the most important art and their creative possibilities seemed endless.”   –Dave Kehr, The New York Times

Italian Film Festival USA

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Wednesday, Apr 5, 2023
7 p.m.

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Wednesday, Apr 12, 2023
7 p.m.

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Free with registration

*General museum admission is FREE for residents of Macomb, Oakland, and Wayne counties.

The Italian Film Festival USA is the largest festival dedicated exclusively to contemporary Italian cinema in the United States. This April it returns to Metro Detroit for a new, in-person edition with the DFT hosting two screenings.

The Italian Film Festival USA presents new, feature-length comedies, dramas, documentaries and even short animated films. They all share iconic Italian locations and language that resonate with audiences worldwide, and offers Detroiters an opportunity to discover a new wave of young Italian film artists without hopping on a plane.

Screenings will include appearances by film directors and bilingual talkbacks with audiences. All films are in Italian with English subtitles.

For the complete festival schedule visit italianfilmfests.org. 

Italian Film Festival USA logo

The Italian Film Festival USA is the largest festival dedicated exclusively to contemporary Italian cinema in the United States. This April it returns to Metro Detroit for a new, in-person edition with the DFT hosting two screenings.

The Italian Film Festival USA presents new, feature-length comedies, dramas, documentaries and even short animated films. They all share iconic Italian locations and language that resonate with audiences worldwide, and offers Detroiters an opportunity to discover a new wave of young Italian film artists without hopping on a plane.

Screenings will include appearances by film directors and bilingual talkbacks with audiences. All films are in Italian with English subtitles.

For the complete festival schedule visit italianfilmfests.org. 

AAW Live! A Virtual Talk with Leah Dickerman

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Wednesday, Feb 22, 2023
6 – 7 p.m.

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Free with registration

Driven from Europe first by the Nazi conquest of France and then the Blitz in London, the Dutch artist Piet Mondrian (1872–1944) settled in New York City where his “mind was blown” by a form of jazz whose popularity was sweeping the city—Boogie Woogie.

Mondrian expressed the revelations of this sonic encounter in some of the best-known and best-loved mid-century abstract paintings.

Leah Dickerman, Director of Research Programs at the Museum of Modern Art, will explore some of the contexts and meanings expressed by one of the artist’s most iconic and beloved works, Broadway Boogie Woogie, which MoMA acquired in 1943, only a few months after Mondrian completed it. 

 

Presented by the Associates of the American Wing with help from the Ida and Conrad H. Smith Fund.

Broadway Boogie Woogie, 1942-43, Museum of Modern Art

Driven from Europe first by the Nazi conquest of France and then the Blitz in London, the Dutch artist Piet Mondrian (1872–1944) settled in New York City where his “mind was blown” by a form of jazz whose popularity was sweeping the city—Boogie Woogie.

Mondrian expressed the revelations of this sonic encounter in some of the best-known and best-loved mid-century abstract paintings.

Leah Dickerman, Director of Research Programs at the Museum of Modern Art, will explore some of the contexts and meanings expressed by one of the artist’s most iconic and beloved works, Broadway Boogie Woogie, which MoMA acquired in 1943, only a few months after Mondrian completed it. 

 

Presented by the Associates of the American Wing with help from the Ida and Conrad H. Smith Fund.

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