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UNH Symphonic Band. Casey Speed. UNH Wind Symphony. Andrew Boysen
Mar. 04
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UNH Chamber Singers. Amy Kotsonis, conductor
Mar. 05
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Student Recital #7
Mar. 05
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Student Capstone Performance (Noa Helquist, Erik Hilyard, Sophie Knickerbocker),
Mar. 07
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Student Capstone Performance (Noa Helquist, Erik Hilyard, Sophie Knickerbocker)
Mar. 08
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Degree Recital: Derek Dong, violin
Mar. 08
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Degree Recital: Oly Sky, Bassoon, and Rebecca Insley, flute
Mar. 28
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Degree Recital: Georgia Power, clarinet
Mar. 28
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Degree Recital: Emily Hughes, voice
Mar. 28
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Degree Recital: Victoria Volokitkin, voice
Mar. 29
The UNH Gallery of Art, in collaboration with the Oqunquit Museum of American Art, presents Networks of Modernism 1898-1968: Works from the Ogunquit Museum of American Art.January 21 - March 16, 2025Tuesday - Sunday 10AM - 5PMUNH Gallery of Art - PCAC (30 Academic Way) Ogunquit was one hub in a vast network of progressive art schools and communities connecting modern artists across the United States and abroad. New advances in transportation technologies, from trains to ocean liners, and more importantly greater access to them, linked artists and their ideas from Taos to Monhegan to New York to Paris. The massive upheavals across the globe stirred by colonialization, political persecution, war, and economic depression prompted the migration of peoples to the United States. These migrants generated connections to new artistic communities and stimulated a flourishing of multicultural artistic exchange that shaped American modernism. The routes of these networks were also subject to racial segregation and anti-immigrant sentiment, denying the equitable access to artistic spaces. Out of the euphoria, anxiety, and struggle that defined modern American life, emerged the diverse artistic responses to modernity on view in these galleries. Organized into a series of thematic groupings, Networks of Modernism contextualizes the artists who lived, worked, or frequented Ogunquit within this broader, interconnected story of American modernism. From the shifting landscape of rapid urbanization and modern forms of labor, to places of escape from the effects of modernity—in both nature and the imagination— this exhibition maps the many ways artists reacted to the immense social, political, and economic changes affecting life in the United States over a roughly 70-year period. Event Url https://calendar.unh.edu/EventDetails.aspx?data=hHr80o3M7J5HEF2SGCUg%2fMmMS0IvUPwdfuq%2bE02wxQV8nX22NPXkMM9AktCoLWoy