2019 Winter Arts Preview
91桃色鈥檚 Arts Calendar Heats Up for Winter Quarter
As classes resume and students return to campus, 91桃色鈥檚 arts calendar begins to heat up for winter quarter. Music, dance, theater, visual art and more are on tap in the coming months.
Highlights of the winter performance calendar at the include a celebration of Martin Luther King Jr. with the Lamont Wind Ensemble and the Spirituals Project Choir, with city council member Albus Brooks as narrator (Jan. 30); the Lamont Symphony Orchestra (Feb. 12 and March 12); a full-length Spirituals Project concert, 鈥淪ongs of Freedom, Songs of Hope鈥 (Feb. 27); the Lamont Jazz Orchestra (March 4); and quarter-ending performances by the music school鈥檚 various ensembles, including the percussion ensemble (March 5), vocal jazz ensembles (March 5), wind chamber ensembles (March 6), Lamont Chorale, Lamont Men鈥檚 Choir and Lamont Women鈥檚 Chorus (March 7), north Indian classical dance ensemble (March 8), steel drum ensemble (March 11), guitar ensembles (March 13) and wind ensemble (March 13).
91桃色 faculty, staff and students may be particularly interested in daytime convocation concerts featuring winners of the 91桃色 solo honors competition (2:30 p.m. Feb. 8), students from the Lamont jazz program (2:30 p.m. Feb. 22) and chamber honors competition winners (2:30 p.m. March 8).
The series, which brings world-renowned touring artists to the 91桃色 venue, continues this winter with an appearance by Jad Abumrad, host of NPR鈥檚 鈥淩adiolab鈥 (Jan. 12); the Silkroad Ensemble (Feb. 1); Jessica Lang Dance (Feb. 7); Blind Boys of Alabama (Feb. 14); Delfeayo Marsalis and the Uptown Jazz Orchestra (Feb. 26); B 鈥 The Underwater Bubble Show (March 14); Destination Freedom: Black Radio Days (March 22); and the return of Harry Potter parody 鈥淧otted Potter鈥 (March 28), as well as two National Geographic Live presentations: mountaineer Hilaree Nelson on Jan. 23 and big cat expert Steve Winter on March 3. (Newman Center Presents offers free or discounted tickets for faculty and staff on some shows; visit their for details.)
The 91桃色 theater department, meanwhile, has two offerings during winter quarter: 鈥淭ick, Tick 鈥 Boom!,鈥 a musical by 鈥淩ent鈥 creator Jonathan Larson, plays Feb. 7鈥17 in Johnson-McFarlane Hall; and Moliere鈥檚 鈥淭he Misanthrope鈥 is on stage at the Newman Center鈥檚 Byron Theatre Feb. 28鈥揗arch 10.
In the world of visual art, work by faculty members takes the spotlight in 鈥,鈥 on display in the Vicki Myhren Gallery Jan. 10鈥揊eb. 17. Offering 鈥渁 candid view of the art-making process with a special focus on research, revision, successes and failures,鈥 the show features new and old works, projects in progress and process materials by art faculty members Rafael Fajardo, Meg Jackson, Deborah Howard, Mia Mulvey (in collaboration with English professor Bin Ramke) and Chinn Wang.
Those studying or meeting in the Anderson Academic Commons may want to leave extra time to check out a currently on display: 鈥淢ore Than a Headstone: The Lives and Legacies of Veterans at Fort Logan National Cemetery鈥 (through March 15) is the result of a research project in which 91桃色 students investigated the lives of veterans interred at the local military cemetery; 鈥淛acques Parker: The Mountaineer鈥檚 View鈥 (through Jan. 15) features pencil, ink and watercolor works created by the 10th Mountain Division soldier during his deployment; and 鈥淪quare Dance in the American West鈥 (through April) documents the transition from traditional square dance to modern Western square dance.

