1. Telling Queer Food Stories

    What does it mean to write about food as a queer person? This question will guide us as we read food poetry and nonfiction by trans and queer authors, then write our own short pieces. Come prepared with paper, something to write with, and a willingness to learn from one another. While this virtual workshop […]

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  2. Arizona Symphony Orchestra

    The Fred Fox School of Music’s Arizona Symphony Orchestra is offering ‘A Mahler Requiem’ commemorating the tragedy, loss and renewed hope of 2020 and 2021. Conducted by Dr. Thomas Cockrell, this special concert on Nov. 20 at 7:30p in Crowder Hall. Mahler’s Fifth Symphony is a symphonic panorama that begins with a funeral march and […]

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  3. Everybody

    Everybody is dying, starting now. But in the meantime, they must account for their life in a public presentation. Can Friendship or Kinship help? Maybe Beauty, Strength, or Mind? Or will these virtues abandon Everybody in their hour of need? Follow a nimble ensemble of actors, cast by lottery at each performance, through this playful […]

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  4. Winter-Themed Art Trivia Happy Hour!

    Winter-Themed Art Trivia Happy Hour from the University of Arizona Museum of Art. It’s winter, which means – for many cultures – that holiday celebrations are in store! This month’s round features works depicting some of these cherished occasions from around the world and throughout time. As usual, the multiple-choice questions will be fun for all […]

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  5. Astronomy and the Visual Arts

    Astronomical art is a good indicator of the relationship between the poetic and scientific worlds.  This presentation, “Astronomy and the Visual Arts,” is part of the Monday Members’ Art Talk series from the University of Arizona Museum of Art. Richard Poss will examine a series of works ranging from medieval manuscript illustrations to contemporary space […]

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  6. Beeston Guitar Competition Finals

    Some of the very best guitarists in the Bolton Guitar Studies program from the Fred Fox School of Music will compete in the 19th Beeston Memorial Guitar Competition Finals at Holsclaw Hall on Nov. 14. Thomas Beeston believed that music is our common denominator and that it has the power to heal, to inspire and […]

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  7. Collegium Musicum and Arizona Baroque

    The University of Arizona’s early music ensemble, Collegium Musicum, presents its Fall concert on Sunday, Nov. 14, 2021, at 3p. Collegium Musicum includes singers from the Fred Fox School of Music, the university at large, and the Tucson community. Sunday, Nov. 14, 3pHolsclaw Hall, $Free Arizona Baroque Yijun Lei, fluteKatelynn Leigh Chalstrom, cornettoCecilia Palma, celloMariana Mevans, organ and […]

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  8. Third Annual Tucson HarpFest

    The 3rd Annual Tucson HarpFest invites you to explore innovative compositions for the harp and to try your hand at composing for the harp. Featuring a rare performance of Freude for two harps by Karlheinz Stockhausen. Composers of all backgrounds and ages are also invited to participate in an interactive composition forum featuring perspectives from […]

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  9. Three Sisters

    Transplanted from their beloved Moscow to a provincial Russian town, three sisters—schoolteacher Olga, unhappily married Masha, idealistic Irina—yearn for the city of their childhood, where they imagine their lives will be transformed and fulfilled. Three Sisters is the portrait of a family grappling with the bittersweet distance between reality and dreams. Discover the humor and heartbreak of […]

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  10. VASE Lecture: The Personal in Porcelain

    Jennifer Ling Datchuk will discuss how her studio practice is informed by the power in materials like porcelain, hair, and domestic objects. She will explore how research, personal narratives, lived experiences, and oral histories are foundations for making work about identity. Jennifer Ling Datchuk is an artist born in Warren, Ohio and raised in Brooklyn, […]

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