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  1. Sticker Design Contest

    NEW DEADLINE - September 15!

    • Richard F. Brush Art Gallery
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  2. Exhibition: Culture Is Not a Costume

    Cultural appropriation occurs when people take elements from a culture that is not their own and use them without understanding or respecting the elements’ original meaning. For many Native Americans...

    • Richard F. Brush Art Gallery
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  3. A Culture Is Not a Costume

    A Culture Is Not a Costume is based on Understanding the Differences Between Cultural Appropriation and Cultural Appreciation, a traveling exhibition organized by the Akwesasne Cultural Center, located twenty-five miles from Canton. Selected artworks from St. Lawrence University’s permanent collection are also included in the exhibition.

    • Richard F. Brush Art Gallery
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  4. Artist’s lecture: Scablands by Photographer Dennis DeHart

    Presented in conjunction with the exhibition, Our Place in the Scheme of Things, on display at the Richard F. Brush Art Gallery until October 9, 2024. The event is free and open to the public.

    • Griffith Arts Center 123
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  5. Exhibition: Change Is a More Accurate Measure of Time Photographs by Mark Klett, SLU class of 1974

    The exhibition is presented in conjunction with the 50th anniversary of Mark Klett’s graduation from St. Lawrence University in 1974. The show features 12 photographs from "El Camino del Diablo", a project based on a journey by a young mining engineer, Raphael Pumpelly, through Arizona and Mexico in 1861 on “the road of the devil.” Over 150 years later, Mark Klett traversed the same route, making photographs in response to Pumpelly’s words. Unable to trace the engineer’s exact steps, Klett created images that are not literal references to specific places or events. Rather, he sought to produce a more poetic narrative to their shared experience of the Arizona desert, along the common route that connects the two through time.

    • Richard F. Brush Art Gallery
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  6. Exhibition: One Earring- Missing & Murdered Indigenous People Awareness

    St. Lawrence University’s Native American Affairs and the Richard F. Brush Art Gallery present One Earring, an exhibition designed to raise awareness about Missing and Murdered Indigenous People (MMIP). Representing those who were stolen or never returned home, the One Earring project was inspired by the U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs Office of Justice Services exhibition of the same title in 2022.

    • Richard F. Brush Art Gallery
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  7. The Alexander String Quartet Concert

    For their final Fall season at St. Lawrence, The Alexander String Quartet will perform pieces by Joseph Haydn, Kian Ravaei, and Franz Schubert. 

    • Peterson-Kermani Performance Hall
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