True Lies and Other Stories: Joy Adams and the Evolution of Mad Sally offers Handwerker Gallery visitors a chance to reconnect with Mad Sally, the protagonist of Joy Adams' paintings, who first appeared in the Gallery eight years ago. With her monumental depictions of Sally, Adams redefines the notion of the hero by presenting an outsider who transcends accepted notions of gender and age. She weaves truth and fantasy in these lushly-painted canvases that are instilled with tradition and simultaneously construct contemporary narratives. Cosponsored by the Ithaca College Gerontology Institute, Division of Interdisciplinary and International Studies, and the Judi and Jay Linden Center for Creativity and Aging.
True Lies and Other Stories: Joy Adams and the Evolution of Mad Sally offers Handwerker Gallery visitors a chance to reconnect with Mad Sally, the protagonist of Joy Adams' paintings, who first appeared in the Gallery eight years ago. With her monumental depictions of Sally, Adams redefines the notion of the hero by presenting an outsider who transcends accepted notions of gender and age. She weaves truth and fantasy in these lushly-painted canvases that are instilled with tradition and simultaneously construct contemporary narratives. Cosponsored by the Ithaca College Gerontology Institute, Division of Interdisciplinary and International Studies, and the Judi and Jay Linden Center for Creativity and Aging.
True Lies and Other Stories: Joy Adams and the Evolution of Mad Sally offers Handwerker Gallery visitors a chance to reconnect with Mad Sally, the protagonist of Joy Adams' paintings, who first appeared in the Gallery eight years ago. With her monumental depictions of Sally, Adams redefines the notion of the hero by presenting an outsider who transcends accepted notions of gender and age. She weaves truth and fantasy in these lushly-painted canvases that are instilled with tradition and simultaneously construct contemporary narratives. Cosponsored by the Ithaca College Gerontology Institute, Division of Interdisciplinary and International Studies, and the Judi and Jay Linden Center for Creativity and Aging.
True Lies and Other Stories: Joy Adams and the Evolution of Mad Sally offers Handwerker Gallery visitors a chance to reconnect with Mad Sally, the protagonist of Joy Adams' paintings, who first appeared in the Gallery eight years ago. With her monumental depictions of Sally, Adams redefines the notion of the hero by presenting an outsider who transcends accepted notions of gender and age. She weaves truth and fantasy in these lushly-painted canvases that are instilled with tradition and simultaneously construct contemporary narratives. Cosponsored by the Ithaca College Gerontology Institute, Division of Interdisciplinary and International Studies, and the Judi and Jay Linden Center for Creativity and Aging.
True Lies and Other Stories: Joy Adams and the Evolution of Mad Sally offers Handwerker Gallery visitors a chance to reconnect with Mad Sally, the protagonist of Joy Adams' paintings, who first appeared in the Gallery eight years ago. With her monumental depictions of Sally, Adams redefines the notion of the hero by presenting an outsider who transcends accepted notions of gender and age. She weaves truth and fantasy in these lushly-painted canvases that are instilled with tradition and simultaneously construct contemporary narratives. Cosponsored by the Ithaca College Gerontology Institute, Division of Interdisciplinary and International Studies, and the Judi and Jay Linden Center for Creativity and Aging.
True Lies and Other Stories: Joy Adams and the Evolution of Mad Sally offers Handwerker Gallery visitors a chance to reconnect with Mad Sally, the protagonist of Joy Adams' paintings, who first appeared in the Gallery eight years ago. With her monumental depictions of Sally, Adams redefines the notion of the hero by presenting an outsider who transcends accepted notions of gender and age. She weaves truth and fantasy in these lushly-painted canvases that are instilled with tradition and simultaneously construct contemporary narratives. Cosponsored by the Ithaca College Gerontology Institute, Division of Interdisciplinary and International Studies, and the Judi and Jay Linden Center for Creativity and Aging.
True Lies and Other Stories: Joy Adams and the Evolution of Mad Sally offers Handwerker Gallery visitors a chance to reconnect with Mad Sally, the protagonist of Joy Adams' paintings, who first appeared in the Gallery eight years ago. With her monumental depictions of Sally, Adams redefines the notion of the hero by presenting an outsider who transcends accepted notions of gender and age. She weaves truth and fantasy in these lushly-painted canvases that are instilled with tradition and simultaneously construct contemporary narratives. Cosponsored by the Ithaca College Gerontology Institute, Division of Interdisciplinary and International Studies, and the Judi and Jay Linden Center for Creativity and Aging.
True Lies and Other Stories: Joy Adams and the Evolution of Mad Sally offers Handwerker Gallery visitors a chance to reconnect with Mad Sally, the protagonist of Joy Adams' paintings, who first appeared in the Gallery eight years ago. With her monumental depictions of Sally, Adams redefines the notion of the hero by presenting an outsider who transcends accepted notions of gender and age. She weaves truth and fantasy in these lushly-painted canvases that are instilled with tradition and simultaneously construct contemporary narratives. Cosponsored by the Ithaca College Gerontology Institute, Division of Interdisciplinary and International Studies, and the Judi and Jay Linden Center for Creativity and Aging.
True Lies and Other Stories: Joy Adams and the Evolution of Mad Sally offers Handwerker Gallery visitors a chance to reconnect with Mad Sally, the protagonist of Joy Adams' paintings, who first appeared in the Gallery eight years ago. With her monumental depictions of Sally, Adams redefines the notion of the hero by presenting an outsider who transcends accepted notions of gender and age. She weaves truth and fantasy in these lushly-painted canvases that are instilled with tradition and simultaneously construct contemporary narratives. Cosponsored by the Ithaca College Gerontology Institute, Division of Interdisciplinary and International Studies, and the Judi and Jay Linden Center for Creativity and Aging.
True Lies and Other Stories: Joy Adams and the Evolution of Mad Sally offers Handwerker Gallery visitors a chance to reconnect with Mad Sally, the protagonist of Joy Adams' paintings, who first appeared in the Gallery eight years ago. With her monumental depictions of Sally, Adams redefines the notion of the hero by presenting an outsider who transcends accepted notions of gender and age. She weaves truth and fantasy in these lushly-painted canvases that are instilled with tradition and simultaneously construct contemporary narratives. Cosponsored by the Ithaca College Gerontology Institute, Division of Interdisciplinary and International Studies, and the Judi and Jay Linden Center for Creativity and Aging.
True Lies and Other Stories: Joy Adams and the Evolution of Mad Sally offers Handwerker Gallery visitors a chance to reconnect with Mad Sally, the protagonist of Joy Adams' paintings, who first appeared in the Gallery eight years ago. With her monumental depictions of Sally, Adams redefines the notion of the hero by presenting an outsider who transcends accepted notions of gender and age. She weaves truth and fantasy in these lushly-painted canvases that are instilled with tradition and simultaneously construct contemporary narratives. Cosponsored by the Ithaca College Gerontology Institute, Division of Interdisciplinary and International Studies, and the Judi and Jay Linden Center for Creativity and Aging.
True Lies and Other Stories: Joy Adams and the Evolution of Mad Sally offers Handwerker Gallery visitors a chance to reconnect with Mad Sally, the protagonist of Joy Adams' paintings, who first appeared in the Gallery eight years ago. With her monumental depictions of Sally, Adams redefines the notion of the hero by presenting an outsider who transcends accepted notions of gender and age. She weaves truth and fantasy in these lushly-painted canvases that are instilled with tradition and simultaneously construct contemporary narratives. Cosponsored by the Ithaca College Gerontology Institute, Division of Interdisciplinary and International Studies, and the Judi and Jay Linden Center for Creativity and Aging.
Provost Rountree will hold her fall semester meeting with the H&S faculty.
In the annual Holocaust Lecture, sponsored by the Jewish Studies Program, Dr. Peter Fritzsche speaks on the choices that Germans made during the Third Reich to accept or reject various aspects of Nazism. Approaching ordinary Germans as active agents, Fritzsche also underscores how much they knew about the Holocaust. This lecture is open to the public and welcomes attendance from the wider Ithaca community.