The
Renaissance
Society

at The University of Chicago
 

Persona

March 10 – April 21, 1996

 
 
Fri, Mar 8, 19965:30 pm

Lecture

Catherine Opie

Location: Gallery 400, University of Illinois
Admission: free
 
Sat, Mar 9, 19967:00 pm

Dance

Only Shallow
Anita Pace

Location: The Renaissance Society
Admission: free
 
Los Angeles-based choreographer Pace will present a multimedia dance performance, which will be videotaped and presented throughout the exhibition.
 
Sun, Mar 10, 19964:00 pm

Performance

Vanessa Beecroft

Location: The Renaissance Society
Admission: free
 
A performance directed by Vanessa Beecroft will take place during the opening reception.
 
Sun, Mar 10, 19964:00 pm

Screening and Panel Discussion


Location: The Renaissance Society
Admission: free
 
Film and video screening, followed by a panel discussion moderated by Lauren Berlant, Professor of English Language and Literature at the University of Chicago, with exhibition artists Catherine Opie, Jean Rasenberger and Tony Tasset.
 
Thu, Mar 21, 19962:00 pm

Lecture

Christine Jorgensen, Atom Bomb
Susan Stryker

Location: The Renaissance Society
Admission: free
 
Susan Stryker, author of Gay by the Bay: A History of Queer Cultures in the San Francisco Bay Area, and founding member of Transgender Nation, will lecture on transexuality, technology, and postmodern embodiment.
 
Sat, Mar 30, 199612:00 pm

Screening


Location: The Renaissance Society
Admission: free
 
Film and video works by exhibition artists Sharon Lockhart, Daniel Marlos, Helen Mirra, Jean Rasenberger, and T. J. Wilcox will be screened during gallery hours on the weekends of March 30 and 31, and April 20 and 21.
 
Mon, Apr 15, 19964:00 pm

Lecture

Judith Butler

Location: University of Chicago Ida Noyes Hall Max Palevsky Cinema
Admission: free
 
Judith Butler, author of Gender Trouble, will lecture on her recent book Bodies That Matter.

This event is sponsored in collaboration with the University of Chicago Department of Gender Studies and Department of Art History.
 
Sat, Apr 20, 19967:00 pm

Concert

AAM (Eddie Prevost, Keith Rowe, and John Tilbury)

Location: University of Chicago Goodspeed Recital Hall
Admission: free
 
Since the mid-sixties the AMM have been a major force in improvised music. The AMM are unique amongst the free jazz improvisors in that their music developed out of a philosophical and political ideology which insists upon the collective over the soloist. It is a music that subtly bends , bubbles and seethes. While cogent on the surface, it suggests endless possibilities derived from the ensemble's varying inner dynamics.
 

   
   
The Renaissance Society
is a contemporary art
museum free and
open to the public
Wed  Feb 08, 2012