| Gallery Talk Behind the Scenes Hiroshige Exhibition Friday, Feb. 15, 11 AM special exhibition admission $6.00 per person, 3 and under free Join Holly Tripman Fitzgerald, Chief Curator, and gain a behind-the-scenes perspective on CAM's collection and current exhibitions through Along the Eastern Sea Road: Hiroshige's Fifty-three Stations of the Tōkaidō and A Time When Art is Everywhere*. |
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Member Coffee Sunday, Feb. 17, 1:30 PM Join CAM Director Anne Brennan for a Member Coffee and tour of Recovery in Flight: The Sculptures of Grainger McKoy. |
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USCT and Civil War Living History
Saturday, Feb. 23, 10 AM - 2 PM Free and open to the public The American Civil War shaped the history of Wilmington and North Carolina in many ways. Discover and discuss the roles and impacts of United States Colored Troops with reenactors utilizing three stations highlighting Camp Life, North Carolina Battles and Slavery, plus two Living History personalities, Harriet Tubman (Carolyn Evans) and Frederick Douglass (Malcolm Beech). Enjoy a talk by Wilmington's Civil War historian Dr. Chris E. Fonvielle Jr. at 1:00 pm in Studio 1; also, all day in Studio 1 watch The Battle of Forks Road (24 min., 2015). |
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Performance Experimental Music, Noise and Sound with Carl Kruger, subterrene, and The Waking Life Thur., Feb. 21, 6:30 PM ($10 at the door) Inspired by and expanding on their interaction with CAM's exhibition A Time When Art is Everywhere: teamLab, experimental and noise musicians Carl Kruger, subterrene, and The Waking Life perform solo sets and as a team. Each bringing their own style to create a unique experience with each performance. (more information) |
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Staged Reading Wilmington Reconstructed Mouths of Babes Theatre Company Sat., Feb. 23, 2 PM (Free and open to the public) In November of 1898, a group of white supremacists seized the city of Wilmington in a violent coup, expelling prominent black citizens and destroying Wilmington's very own black newspaper, The Daily Record. The event was covered up and whitewashed for the better part of a century. This work-in-progress documentary play by Mouths of Babes Theatre Company follows the New York Times Magazine writer John Jeremiah Sullivan as he enlists 8th graders to track down and recover lost articles of The Daily Record, literally reconstructing the lost history of that period, and bringing to light voices that hate sought to destroy.
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Art Appreciation Talk Minnie Evans Sun., Feb. 24, 2:30 PM Free and open to the public CAM member: $15; Non-member: $20 |
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Jazz@the CAM March 7, 2019, 6:30 PM Innovative pianist Ernest Turner is making his first Jazz @ The CAM appearance, Turner 's mantra is "searching for the ever illusive musical truth". His professional career spans nearly twenty years including the recent "Monk @ 100" - a ten-day event presented by Duke Performances celebrating the 100-year anniversary of Thelonious Monk's birthday. He has performed with many great artists including Steve Turre, Randy Brecker, Delfeayo and Jason Marsalis, Irvin Mayfield and the New Orleans Jazz Orchestra, the Heath Brothers, Nnenna Freelon, Eve Cornelious, Christian Scott, and many others. |
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This project was supported by the N.C. Arts Council, a division of the Department of Natural & Cultural Resources. |
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