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Calendar
May
2001
Commencement
Weekend
Yale's
300th Commencement is preceded by an array of receptions, concerts,
and theatrical productions, as well as the traditional exercises
and addresses. Highlights include:
Yale
Dramatic Association Musical, How To Succeed in Business Without
Really Trying, with four performances: May 18, 8pm; May
19 at 2pm and 8pm; and May 20 at 8:30; staged at the University
Theatre, 222 York Street. Call 203-432-1212 for tickets.
Baccalaureate
Services featuring an address by President Richard Levin and
remarks by the Dean of the College and the University Chaplain,
Woolsey Hall; May 20 at 9:30am and 11am.
Class
Day Exercises, including the awarding of honors, celebration
of College traditions, and a keynote address by Senator Hillary
Rodham Clinton '73JD: May 20 at 2pm, on the Old Campus.
Yale
Concert Band Annual Twilight Concert, May 20 at 7pm, on the
Old Campus. Free.
Commencement
Exercises, May 21 at 10:30am, on the Old Campus.
University
Art Gallery
1111 Chapel Street, 432-0600
www.yale.edu/artgallery
Hours:
Tuesday through Saturday, 10am-5pm; Sunday, 1-6pm.
"Ancients
and Moderns: Tradition and Transformation in the Arts of Asia, II"
Through
September 2
The second
part of a two-part exhibition on Asian art explores the ways the
past has served as a source of inspiration for Asian artists in
a variety of media.
Ceramics
from the Neolithic Dawenkou Culture (4th-3rd millennia BCE) to the
Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) in China, and from the Jomon Period (c.
10,000-c. 300 BCE) to the Edo Period (1615-1868) in Japan, represent
the "ancients." Twentieth-century Japanese ceramics from the collection
of Molly and Walter Bareiss '40 provide comparisons with "moderns."
Chinese paintings and calligraphy, Japanese prints of the Edo, Meji
(1868-1912), and Taisho (1912-1926) periods, and contemporary prints
further reveal ways in which the past has served as a source of
renewal or as a tradition to be rejected.
Center
for British Art
1080
Chapel Street, 432-2800
www.yale.edu/ycba
Hours:
Tuesday through Saturday, 10am-5pm; Sunday, 12-5pm.
"The
Line of Beauty: British Drawings and Watercolors of the Eighteenth
Century"
May
19 through September 2
More than
100 drawings and watercolors, drawn from the BAC's 18th-century
holdings, comprise this exhibit, which celebrates the richness of
18th-century drawing, while examining the professional and social
roles played by draftsmanship during the period. Among the highlights
are works by William Blake, John Robert Cozens, Thomas Gainsborough,
and William Hogarth.
School
of Drama
222 York Street, 432-1234
www.yale.edu/drama
"Our
Town," by Thornton Wilder '20; directed by Claudia Zelevansky
May
3 through May 9
Closing
the Drama School's 75th anniversary season is this American classic,
winner of the 1937 Pulitzer Prize for Drama, depicting life in a
New Hampshire village during the early part of the 20th century.
Peabody
Museum
170 Whitney Avenue, 432-5050
www.peabody.yale.edu
Hours:
Monday through Saturday, 10am-5pm; Sunday 12-5pm.
"The
African Roots of the Amistad Rebellion: Masks of the Sacred Bush"
Through
December 31
Most of
the captives on board the historic Amistad were Mende from
Sierra Leone and Liberia in West Africa. Today, the Mende are the
most numerous cultural group in Sierra Leone, numbering more than
1.5 million people.
A private
collection of West African masks and other artifacts from Sierra
Leone, complemented by rare photographs and field recordings, explores
the cultural traditions behind the epochal events surrounding the
Amistad rebellion, and gives insight into the rituals of the Mende
people.  |