Calendar of Events
Wednesday, October 25, 2023
Pellissippi State: "what abides here" by Anna Halliwell Gianferante
Category: Exhibitions, visual art and Free event
Photos developed from film and handwritten notes passed in class take on a new life in the mixed media exhibit “what abides here” at Pellissippi State Community College. The solo exhibition of artist Anna Halliwell Gianferante is on display in the Bagwell Center for Media and Art Gallery on the college’s Hardin Valley Campus through Nov. 17. Admission to the gallery is free, and it is open to the public weekdays 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
A public reception with the artist will be held 3 - 5 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 26, in the Bagwell Center, 10915 Hardin Valley Road, Knoxville.
The “what abides here” collection of mixed media works “meets at the junction of memory, photography, truth, glitches and loss,” said Gianferante, an Oak Ridge native who is now a full-time Art instructor at Pellissippi State. This body of work began with Gianferante’s master’s thesis, “Forget Me Not (Really)” for Savannah College of Art and Design. Gianferante sanded, erased and painted on personal photographs that depict moments with people and places no longer in her life. Gianaferante said the art creates separation between the figures and the viewer, just as the subjects of the photographs are now separated from the artist. Gianferante added to the exhibit with a collection of redacted notes she received in school as a teenager. The blank spaces serve as lapses in memory, she explained, while also abstracting the stories to make them unrecognizable. The final pieces of the exhibit showcase a different way of manipulating old photographs using artificial intelligence. Gianferante first erased parts of her original photos using AI and then printed them as cyanotypes to mimic the earliest processes of photography. By harnessing the sun to expose light onto fabric painted with light-sensitive chemicals, each print is unique based on both the weather and the time of exposure. “Some are so unrecognizable that the title is all that seems to be left of the original subject – pushing boundaries of memory and personal truth,” Gianferante said.
Gianferante earned her Master of Fine Arts in painting from Savannah College of Art and Design and her Master of Science in teacher education from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. She has taught Art courses for more than 11 years in both K-12 public schools and higher education institutions. To request accommodations for any campus event, call 865.694.6411 or email accommodations@pstcc.edu.
Pellissippi State | 865.694.6638 | marketing@pstcc.edu | www.pstcc.edu
10915 Hardin Valley Road, Knoxville, TN 37933
One Health & Humanities Days: Arts & Humanities Interventions
Category: Exhibitions, visual art, Festivals, special events, Free event, Health, wellness and Science, nature
One Health + Humanities Days is a three-day series of events showcasing the critical role that arts and humanities play in understanding and exploring sustainability and global wellbeing, including human, animal, plant, and environmental health. One Health + Humanities Days is a partnership between the UT Humanities Center and the UT One Health Initiative.
https://humanitiescenter.utk.edu/programs/one-health-humanities-days/
• Mortality as an Object of Team Research: A SPARKS Event
• Pulitzer Prize Finalist David Haskell Lecture + Book Signing: “Sounds Wild + Broken: Learning From the Beginnings of Sound”
• 300 Years of Surgery: Marin Marais and a Musical Perspective on the Medical Humanities
• Environmental Change and the Decline of an Ancient City: The Case of Lixus, Northern Morocco (interactive exhibit in Hodges Library)
• Equine Health and Medicine: Historical & Literary Perspectives
• Black Maternal Health Community Think-Tank
• Climate Change, Language Change: Creating a Vocabulary of Healing Through Theatre Games (by invitation only)
• Lecture by Eric Avery, MD: “Art as (my) Medicine”
• Environmental Change and the Decline of an Ancient City: The Case of Lixus, Northern Morocco (interactive exhibit in Hodges Library)
• Lecture by Helene Sinnreich: “Public Health in Nazi Ghettos”
• Centering the Marginalized: Mitigating mental health issues while enhancing retention initiatives at PWIs
• Embodied Cinema: Affect, Dance, and Speculative Wellness
• Environmental Change and the Decline of an Ancient City: The Case of Lixus, Northern Morocco (interactive exhibit in Hodges Library)
October 15, 2023-Jan 30, 2024: Print Exhibition in UT Printmaking Showcase Gallery
Knoxville Symphony Orchestra: Q Series at the Elks Lodge
Category: Culinary arts, food and Music
Wednesday, October 25, 2023, at 12:00 p.m.
Join us for a lunchtime performance at The Elks Lodge featuring our Principal String Quartet. Lunch is included with ticket purchase.
Information/tickets: 865-291-3310 or https://knoxvillesymphony.com
The Friends of the Grove Theatre: Andrew Finn Magill & The Polaris Project
Category: Music
The Friends of the Grove Theatre present Andrew Finn Magill & The Polaris Project at the Historic Grove Theater in Oak Ridge, TN on Wednesday Oct 25th at 7 PM.
The Polaris Project features Justin Stanton of Snarky Puppy, Ethan Jodziewicz on Bass (Sierra Hull, Molly Tuttle) and drummer Justin Watt of the Glen Miller Orchestra. Doors open at 6PM and the show starts at 7PM.
East Tennessee Historical Society: Bill Landry - A Last Hurrah
Category: Free event, History, heritage, Lecture, panel and Literature, spoken word, writing
Wednesday, October 25, 2023 @ 12:00 pm
At East Tennessee History Center, 601 S. Gay Street, Knoxville, TN 37902
Bill Landry will be discussing his recent book, A Last Hurrah, along with his Tennessee book which was published just in time for the pandemic, When the West Was Tennessee. A Last Hurrah is a collection of writings, poems, short stories and behind the scenes experiences and tales from the WBIR-TV Heartland Series which aired from 1984 through 2009. When the West Was Tennessee is a unique account of Tennessee’s history which the Heartland team wished they had had when beginning the series. It just took 30 years to write it! Join us to learn more about the history of the state and this historic television series. Reservations are not required, but recommended due to limited seating. Reserve your seat at https://easttnhistory.org/events/last-hurrah. Virtual options available.
Bill Landry has experienced a lifetime of performing, educating, and entertaining. He's among the lucky few whose vocation became his avocation. He holds two Emmy-Awards for directing, an Honorary Doctor of Fine Arts from Lincoln Memorial University, Educator of the Year Award from Carson Newman University, and has served on the Tennessee Historical Commission.
Bill's a trained theater artist with a Master of Fine Arts degree from the Dallas Theater Center, Trinity University, San Antonio, TX; with these credentials, Bill served as Spokesman for the Tennessee Valley Authority at the 1982 World's Fair in Knoxville and TVA's 50th Anniversary Celebration. His lifetime interest in the people and the culture of the region and the Smoky Mountains brought him and The Heartland Series together. In 1984, Bill became the spokesperson, a writer, co-producer, and host for the series.
601 S. Gay Street | Knoxville, TN | (865) 215-8824
UT College of Music: 300 Years of Surgery: Marin Marias and a Musical Perspective on the Medical Humanities
Category: Free event, Music, Science, nature and Technology
A collaboration between the UT College of Music, UT Psychological Clinic, and UT Medical Center, this concert and discussion combines a musical performance with descriptions of the surgical process, use of anesthesia, stress and mental health preceding and during a surgical procedure, and ways that these processes are depicted in the music itself.
October 25, 7:30 p.m.
Sandra G. Powell Recital Hall
Natalie L. Haslam Music Center
UT College of Music: Unless otherwise noted, concerts are FREE and open to the public. In-person events that take place in the Sandra G. Powell Recital Hall or the James R. Cox Auditorium also have livestream options: https://music.utk.edu/news-events/#calendar. Venues: Sandra G. Powell Recital Hall in the Natalie L. Haslam Music Center located at 1741 Volunteer Boulevard; James R. Cox Auditorium and Performance Hall 32, both in the Alumni Memorial Building located at 1408 Middle Drive. Information: 865-974-8935, https://music.utk.edu/events/
McClung Museum: Tintype Photography - History & PRocess
Category: Exhibitions, visual art, Free event, History, heritage and Lecture, panel
Join the McClung Student Advisory Board for an evening that explores early photographic processes. Local artist, Kelsey Dillow, will be onsite to demo tintype photography, and discuss the appeal of wet plate collodion. Louisa Trott will talk about the history of photography and film.
This program is being presented in conjunction with the exhibition, In Conversation: Will Wilson, which is on view at the McClung Museum through December 2nd.
Ijams Nature Center: Hallo-Week
Category: Classes, workshops, Festivals, special events, Kids, family and Science, nature
Embrace the eerie excitement of Spooky Season with Ijams' spooktacular Hallo-Week! Prepare for illuminating night hikes, spine-tingling scary stories, and monster-themed workshops.
Attend the 1st Annual Scare Fair at Mead's Quarry on Saturday, October 28, featuring creepy creations from local artists, delectable delights from the G.I Taco food truck, a lively beer garden, and soul-stirring music. Then immerse yourself in the thrill of the Enchanted Forest.
Don't miss out on this ghoulishly good time! Explore our jam-packed Hallo-Week calendar of events, and secure your spot in the fun-filled festivities now!
10/24 • A Night of Haunted Tales with Smoky Mountain Storytellers
10/25 • Ijams After Dark: Hallo-week at Ijams
10/26 • Family Owl Prowl: Hallo-week at Ijams
10/28 • Monsters Made with Love
10/28 • Ijams Scare Fair at Mead's Quarry: Hallo-Week at Ijams
10/28 • Ijams Enchanted Forest: Hallo-week at Ijams
10/29 • Family Pumpkin Carving: Hallo-week at Ijams
10/29 • Self Care Sunday Yoga with Hope Irwin
10/29 • DIY Door Broom Workshop
UT Libraries: National Exhibit on Mental Health Care and Custody
Category: Exhibitions, visual art, Free event, Health, wellness and History, heritage
A national exhibition examining the nation’s past responses to mental health and current approaches to care will be on display at UT Libraries this fall. The National Library of Medicine’s Care and Custody: Past Responses to Mental Health exhibit will be in the Jack E. Reese Galleria on the first floor of Hodges Library.
The traveling exhibit provides a historical overview of how mental health policies have evolved from custodial forms of treatment such as commitments to asylums and mass incarcerations to more inclusive approaches aimed at protecting the rights of those with mental health conditions. The exhibit also highlights how physicians, advocates, families, and government agencies have contributed to shaping mental health policies.
UT Libraries’ goal for hosting the traveling exhibition is to spark conversations surrounding mental health and effective coping strategies among UT students, faculty, staff, and community members.
A book display featuring related reads on mental health will be viewable on the second floor of Hodges Library.
UT Libraries was selected as a location for the traveling exhibition through the efforts of librarians Melanie Dixson, Niki Cobb, Calantha Tillotson, and Paris Whalon.
Discover Tall Ship Pinta
Category: Festivals, special events, Kids, family and Science, nature
On Friday October 20th the “Pinta”, a Replica of a Portuguese Caravel used by Columbus and many early explorers will open as a “floating museum” for dockside educational tours. The Ship will be docked at Calhoun’s on the River, 400 Neyland Dr, Knoxville, TN 37902 until her departure October 30th.
In 2005, the Pinta was Launched in Brazil after 3 years of Construction. The Ship was built by 8th Generation Portuguese Shipwrights using the same methods and hand tools that were used to build the original in the 15th Century. The Pinta was the first Ship to sight land on the famous voyage of discovery on October 12th, 1492.
Historians consider the “Caravel” the space shuttle of the 15th Century and was used as early as the 13th Century and into the 16th Century. The Caravel was mainly used as a typical trading vessel along the Mediterranean and African Coast before being used for Transatlantic Voyages to open up new trading routes all over the World.
The general public is invited to step back in time & explore the Pinta for self guided tours from the 20th-29th October from 9:00a-5:00p daily. No reservations are necessary. Tickets are purchased at the Ship and prices are $8.00 for Adults, $7.00 for Seniors/Military (65+), and $6.00 for Children (5 - 16). Children 4 and under are Free.
Teachers or organizations wishing to schedule a 30 minute guided tour with a crew member during the weekdays should go to www.ninapinta.org/tour/html. Group tours require a minimum of 15 people. Please call 251-293-4193 or email ninapintatour@gmail.com for any inquires.
Clarence Brown Theatre: The Moors
Category: Theatre
The Moors
By Jen Silverman
The Lab Theatre
October 18 – November 5, 2023
Wait. What? An anthropomorphic Mastiff. A catfished governess. Two forlorn sisters on bleak English Moors yearning for love in a manor where every room looks the same. This is a new play the likes of which you have not seen before. It’s a dark, funny, genre-bending trip the New York Times calls, “the reason we go to the theater.” Try it!
Clarence Brown Theatre, 1714 Andy Holt Ave on the UT campus, Knoxville, TN 37996. For information/tickets: 865-974-5161, www.clarencebrowntheatre.com
UT Humanities Center: Prints & Books by Eric Avery, MD
Category: Exhibitions, visual art, Free event, History, heritage and Literature, spoken word, writing
This event is available to the public at the UT Printmaking Showcase Gallery. The Printmaking Showcase Gallery is located in the UTK Art and Architecture Building, in the second-floor hallway outside of the Printmaking Lab (Room 241).
It will feature selected prints and books by medical doctor and visual artist Eric Avery MD as he explores issues such as social responses to diseases (specifically HIV and Emerging Infectious Diseases), death, and sexual health. As part of one of his exhibitions, Avery set up an HIV clinic at the Fogg Museum of Art at Harvard University. His work has been shown internationally, and is in the collections of the National Gallery of Art (Washington, DC), the ARTS Medica Collection at the Philadelphia Museum of Art (Philadelphia, PA), and the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library at Yale University (New Haven, CT), among many others. His website is: https://www.ericaveryartist.com/
These events are free to attend and open to students, faculty, and the public.
https://www.facebook.com/events/332368039150381