Is the Fine Arts Center Concert Hall really that ugly?

Check out one person’s opinion here

I work in a neobrutalist building. I hate it. I look out my window at what would easily be the most-hated building in all of Massachusetts if it weren’t for the fact that the UMass Amherst campus is too far from Boston to be known statewide. This would be the Fine Arts Center (see above), a gigantic nightmare of concrete slaps that look to have been salvaged from the Berlin Wall. It compensates for ugliness by also being leaky, drafty, damp, and soulless. Seeing a performance at the Fine Arts Center has all the intimacy of making love in Aisle Three of your local Wal-Mart, except that Wal-Mart has better lighting.

Preserve this junk? I think not.

What do you think?

We’ve got our reasons…What’s Yours?

We have OUR reasons why gifts to the Fine Arts Center are important. But it’s YOUR reason that counts! Let us know. Click here, tell us why you give and you’ll be entered to win tickets. Reasons why gifts to the Fine Arts Center are important – but it’s YOUR reason that counts! Let us know. Click here, tell us why you give and you’ll be entered to win tickets.

Discover Turkey Tour June 2010

Friday, June 18 – Monday, June 28

Discover Turkey in a special escorted tour June 18-28, 2010 Organized and presented by The Turkish Cultural Center of Western Massachusetts in partnership with the Asian Arts & Culture Program, Fine Arts Center Did you know Istanbul has been selected as the 2010 cultural capital of Europe? Turkey stands as a bridge between the civilizations of the East and West. Enjoy the history and beauty of the renowned cities of Istanbul and Ankara home to famous monuments, the Blue Mosque, treasures at the Hagia Sophia museum and Topkapi palace, breathe in the spice filled “souks”-markets that entice shopping for renowned kilim rugs and spend an evening strolling along the Bosphorous. Travel into the heartland to see the natural landscape wonders of Cappadocia and Pamukkale, the Anatalya region, known as the Turkish Riviera by the Mediterranean Sea and much more. This land of snow capped mountains, brilliant sunsets and a hopping cultural life in its exciting cities is topped only by the hospitality of the Turkish people. Turkey is a must see for all travel lovers. We invite you to apply to participate in this escorted tour offered at a special all inclusive price of $2500. The Turkish Cultural Center of Western Massachusetts working in tandem with BAKiAD. Bosphorus Atlantic Association of Cultural Cooperation and Friendship encourages professionals in the United States to visit and cultivate ties with the Turkish people, academic institutions and businesses.

Application for a subsidized tour
The Turkish Cultural Center of Western Massachusetts will be responsible for the selection and the number of participants for the tour. Each tour group will be limited to sixteen people with a native speaking guide. Please email turkeytrip@tccwesternmass.org or go online for an application and submit it by November 1, 2009. All selected participants will be informed in December 2009 for the June 18-28, 2010 tour. Two orientation meetings will be held in fall 2009 and March 2010 prior to the tour.
Supported by the Ministry of Turkish Culture & Tourism.

To get information about events hosted by the Western Massachusetts Turkish Cultural Center, for the fall please visit their website.

Goodnight Moon and The Runaway Bunny

Tuesday, May 11
Bowker Auditorium
$6 students, $8 adults

SOLD OUT

Goodnight Moon is a celebration of familiar nighttime rituals, while The Runaway Bunny’s pretend tale of leaving home evokes reassuring responses from his loving mum. Both tales feature endearing rabbit characters, and the soothing rhythms of bunny banter and dream-like imagery never fail to infuse young readers with a reassuring sense of security and peace. Whimsical puppetry and evocative original music will bring a new sense of appreciation to stories that have delighted several generations. This first-rate presentation will inspire students to stretch their imaginations when you encourage them to draw, write or tell short stories in the classroom. Recommended for grades Pre-K – 2. Noon performance also available.

Curriculum Connections: Literature, Family Security, Imagination, Storytelling, Drawing, Puppetry

Goodnight Moon and The Runaway Bunny 12 PM

Tuesday, May 11
Bowker Auditorium from 12:00 pm to 1:00 pm
$6 students, $8 adults

Reserve Tickets Online

Goodnight Moon is a celebration of familiar nighttime rituals, while The Runaway Bunny’s pretend tale of leaving home evokes reassuring responses from his loving mum. Both tales feature endearing rabbit characters, and the soothing rhythms of bunny banter and dream-like imagery never fail to infuse young readers with a reassuring sense of security and peace. Whimsical puppetry and evocative original music will bring a new sense of appreciation to stories that have delighted several generations. This first-rate presentation will inspire students to stretch their imaginations when you encourage them to draw, write or tell short stories in the classroom. Recommended for grades Pre-K – 2. Noon performance also available.

Curriculum Connections: Literature, Family Security, Imagination, Storytelling, Drawing, Puppetry

Spirit and Soul: Nalini Nadkarni

Tuesday, April 27
Bowker Auditorium 7:30 pm
Free

Nalini Nadkarni has been called “the queen of forest canopy research,” a field that relates directly to three of the most pressing environmental issues of our time: the maintenance of biodiversity, the stability of world climate, and the sustainability of forests.

She has spent more than two decades climbing the tall trees of Costa Rica, Papua New Guinea, the Amazon, and the Pacific Northwest. In 1994 she realized that there was no central database for storing and analyzing the research she was gathering, so she invented one. This state-of-the-art repository, called the Big Canopy Database, is credited with speeding cross-disciplinary collaboration just as a common database revolutionized the mapping of the human genome.

Nadkarni, a professor at Evergreen State College in Olympia,Washington, is known for using nontraditional pathways to raise awareness of nature’s importance, working with prisoners, artists, dancers, musicians, and even loggers. Her work has been featured in Glamour, National Geographic, on TV, and in a giant-screen film, as well as in traditional science publications.

Between Earth and Sky: Our Intimate Connections with Trees
Drawing from her 2008 book of the same name, Nadkarni presents a rich tapestry of personal stories celebrating profound connections we have with trees: the dazzling array of goods and services they provide, their role in commerce and medicine, and the powerful lessons they hold for us.

This event co sponsored by The Environmental Institute (TEI), the TEI Art and Environment Working Group, UMass Amherst Department of Natural Resources Conservation, UMass Amherst Department of Political Science, The Graduate School, and the Engineering Research Center for the Collaborative Adaptive Sensing of the Atmosphere (CASA)

10th Annual Juniper Literary Festival

Friday, April 23 and Saturday, April 24
Fine Arts Center Concert Hall Lobby, University Gallery and Amherst Cinema
Free and open to the public.

Celebrating the 10th anniversary of the original BigSmallPressFest and the home-grown, international poetry journal jubilat with readings, addresses, and an independent press fair. More details to follow.

Presented in collaboration with the UMass MFA Program for Poets and Writers, the Juniper Initiative, the Amherst Cinema Arts Center and the UMass Fine Arts Center.

Most Valuable Player

Friday, April 16
Concert Hall
$6 students, $8 adults

Reserve Tickets Online

This triumphant story of Jackie Robinson, the first African-American to play professional major league baseball, chronicles the young athlete’s nonviolent struggle to integrate what was then considered a “white man’s game.” Through it all, Jackie’s courage, intelligence, leadership, resilience and athletic skill propelled him to become a national hero. Advanced in-class reading of books on Jackie Robinson is a great way for students to make historical connections. Recommended for grades 4-8.

Curriculum Connections: Baseball, Segregation, Resilience, National Heroes, Race Relations

Parker and Drake invite the brilliant tenor and soprano saxophonist Evan Parker to join them.

Thursday, April 15
Bezanson Recital Hall 8:00 pm
$12 General Public; $7 Students

“William Parker and Hamid Drake are the best rhythm section in jazz right now,” says Alternative Press. This has been true for 15 years. We celebrate this dynamic duo — respected around the world for their commitment and musicality — with three concerts, featuring special guests.

“Not since Don Cherry and Ed Blackwell joined forces have two musicians so organically wedded world-music influences with free jazz,” writes Jazziz. Since the late1970’s, Hamid Drake has moved easily between work with top jazz improvisers like David Murray, Don Cherry and Pharaoh Sanders, and international artists like Foday Muso Suso, Mahmoud Gania and Gigi. In 1972 Parker began playing with musicians such as Bill Dixon, Milford Graves, Billy Higgins and Sunny Murray, before becoming a member of the Cecil Taylor Unit, where he played a prominent role for over a decade. Time Out New York proclaimed William Parker one of “the 50 greatest New York musicians of all time.”

Parker and Drake invite the brilliant tenor and soprano saxophonist Evan Parker to join them. Among Europe’s most innovative and intriguing saxophonists, Parker has worked with Derek Bailey, Tony Oxley, Alexander von Schlippenbach and virtually every other important European innovator of the last 45 years. “Evan Parker is that rare bird of contemporary playing: a thoroughly individual voice,” writes AllAboutJazz. “Parker has developed a personal vocabulary that is simultaneously instantly recognizable and adaptable to the most varied of situations.”

Clean Slate: New Paintings by Anne LaPrade Seuthe

Monday, April 12 – Friday, April 30
Augusta Savage Gallery

The paintings in this exhibition started out as, what LaPrade Seuthe calls, clean slates. Beginning with discarded maps, she carefully color matches the hues in the existing maps and applies these opaque paint mixtures to eradicate names, symbols and other location identifiers. Once the clean slate has been established, she adds drawings of images culled from encyclopedias, dictionaries, travel guides and assorted manuals. The images are separated by layers of grid lines – a device suggesting there is a connection between all that exists in the natural world. Translucent layers of paint are built up in a process that unifies the surface while modifying the imagery in various ways. Some images become obscured while others become more pronounced. For her, this process seems to parallel an internal process of creating a clean slate or starting over. Some experiences remain vivid in our minds and can easily be recalled, while others exist as vestiges. Her painting is complete when connections between seemingly random images are revealed. Since her first solo show in 1994, Massachusetts-born LaPrade Seuthe has participated in numerous group exhibitions including most recently the London Biennale, and the Zendai Museum of Modern Art in Shanghai. She is Director of Hampden and Central Galleries at the University of Massachusetts.