2011

Sulawesi 2011





Sulawesi 2011, a set on Flickr.




2011

Bali 2011





Bali 2011, a set on Flickr.




2011

Yogyakarta 2011





Yogyakarta 2011, a set on Flickr.




2011

Jakarta, the last day - 2011








2011

Illustration: Japan Earthquake 11-03-2011

I’ve recently created new illustration, Japan Earthquake 11-03-2011, that was inspired by the recent disaster in Japan. With this illustration I’ve joined force with To Japan with Love, a group of artists who are aiming at raising funds for Japan earthquake relief efforts. My illustration will be showcased at the art show (May 4th, 2011 […]




2011

Institutional Web Management Workshop 2011: Responding to Change (2011)

IWMW 15 Institutional Web Management Workshop 2011: Responding to Change held at the University of Reading on 26-27 July 2011




2011

Swachh Bharat Mission averted 60,000-70,000 infant deaths between 2011 & 2020, shows Nature study (The Print)

Swachh Bharat Mission averted 60,000-70,000 infant deaths between 2011 & 2020, shows Nature study (The Print)

IFPRI Researchers analyzed infant & under-5 mortality data from 35 states, 640 districts. Research praised by PM Modi on X.

The post Swachh Bharat Mission averted 60,000-70,000 infant deaths between 2011 & 2020, shows Nature study (The Print) appeared first on IFPRI.




2011

Commercial Cooling Showcase 2011

The NEWS’ annual Cooling Showcase has traditionally introduced the latest air conditioning units available for the upcoming summer season. The intent is to help contractors prepare for this busy period by doing the research that will help them to distinguish between brands. In this issue, we focus on the commercial side of the air conditioning industry.





2011

Film Industry Conference 2011

Booking is now open for the Film Industry Conference 2011! Visit the website for further details and to book your place.




2011

Young Film Critic competition 2011 - new resources

The Young Film Critic competition is open for entries from students aged 4-19. The supporting website features all the details, along with a brand new set of classroom resources to support entries.




2011

OSCE conducts regional seminar in Kazakhstan on Vienna Document 2011

ASTANA, 24 May 2016 – An OSCE-supported regional training seminar for some 50 military officers from Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan on the practical implementation of the Vienna Document 2011 and confidence- and security-building measures began today in Astana.

The OSCE Programme Office in Astana organized the four-day event in co-operation with Kazakhstan's Defence Ministry and with the support of the OSCE field operations.

Military and civilian experts from France, Hungary, the OSCE Forum for Security Co-operation and the Conference on Interaction and Confidence-Building Measures in Asia will share their expertise. The participants will discuss developments in the field of confidence- and security-building measures, which are the focus of the Vienna Document 2011, as well as  its implementation aspects, such as inspection procedures, experience exchange and the demonstration of weapons and equipment systems.

Deputy Defence Minister of Kazakhstan Talgat Mukhtarov said: “The Vienna Document is one of the most important instruments of the OSCE’s politico-military dimension. It has long served to promote co-operation, transparency and confidence building as well as a system of verification. While the annual seminar serves to help us understand the ‘letter’ of the Vienna Document, it is always very important that our activities embrace its ‘spirit.’”

“The OSCE has been placing considerable emphasis on building confidence and security through closer co-operation of the armed forces in the region under the Vienna Document 2011,” said György Szabó, Head of the OSCE Programme Office in Astana. “What makes the Vienna Document so exceptional is that it does not only helps de-escalate a potential conflict, but can help build relations between countries in such a way that war between them seems inconceivable.”

Robin Mossinkoff, Head of the Forum for Security Co-operation Support Section, highlighted the work done to build trust and confidence by OSCE participating States, supported by the OSCE. He noted that this was conducted not only under the Vienna Document, but also agreements such as the Code of Conduct on Political-Military Aspects of Security and the Document on Small Arms and Light Weapons, and Stockpiles of Conventional Ammunition.

The seminar will include theoretical exercises and a simulated inspection visit to the 36th Air Assault Brigade near Astana on 27 May. The participants will carry out an evaluation in accordance with the provisions of the Vienna Document on compliance and verification, and produce a report.

The Vienna Document was adopted by all OSCE participating States and obliges them to share information on their armed forces and military activities. It also contains provisions on compliance and verification, such as conducting and hosting inspections and evaluations, as well as on risk reduction, military contacts and co-operation, and prior notification of certain military activities.

The OSCE Programme Office in Astana has been organizing seminars on the Vienna Document in Kazakhstan since 2006. The seminar is part of the Programme Office's long-standing efforts to promote OSCE confidence- and security-building measures and regional security.

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2011

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2011

[ D.50 (2011) Supplement 2 (05/13) ] - Supplement 2: Guidelines for reducing the costs of international Internet connectivity

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2011

[ X.1500 (2011) Amendment 12 (03/18) ] - Revised structured cybersecurity information exchange techniques

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2011

Champions 2011 en el Bernabeu¿P*ta¿España, ¿P*ta¿Cataluña y el Gol de Messi




2011

Legati, delegati e l’impresa d’Oltremare (secoli XII-XIII) = Papal Legates, Delegates and the Crusades (12th-13th Century): Atti del Convegno internazionale di studi Milano, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, 9-11 marzo 2011

Location: Electronic Resource- 




2011

Les origines de l’abbaye cistercienne d’Orval: Actes du colloque organisé à Orval le 23 juillet 2011

Location: Electronic Resource- 




2011

Scholarships, Grants and Prizes 2011

Scholarships, Grants and Prizes 2011




2011

Noel joins board of Tata Sons; first Tata family member since 2011 to serve on both boards at once

Noel Tata, newly appointed chairman of Tata Trusts, has joined the board of Tata Sons as a nominee director. This marks the first time since 2011 that a Tata family member holds positions on both boards concurrently. Tata Trusts, with its 66% stake, is the largest shareholder in Tata Sons, the holding company of the Tata Group.




2011

Changelog Malware Spam - Re: Changelog 2011 update

No, you did not request a changelog and yes you will get malware if you click on the link!




2011

2011

New & Improved

CULTURAL CHARLOTTE

coming soon......




2011

Week of January 17, 2011

Monday  Jan.  17

Bridging the Gap: Rhythms, Rhymes and Race in America
3:00-5:00pm - Wells Fargo Auditorium @ the Knight Theater (430 S. Tryon)
Admission: FREE (reservations suggested)
"Bridging the Gap: Rhythms, Rhymes and Race in America" traces the historical evolution of American music and popular culture. From the haunting call of the African drum and secret code of the Negro spiritual to Native American chant, the king of rock and hypnotic rhyme of hip-hop, this compelling program reveals how music established a critical dialogue during times of great conflict in America. One part narration, two parts audience participation and entertaining live performances, the program ends with an open audience discussion. Through study of the social strata, race, class and culture, we might just discover that we have more in common than history books have led us to believe.  ** This event is part of MLK Day at The Gantt.


Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day @ the Levine
10:00am-4:00pm – Levine Museum of the New South
Admission: FREE
This annual Family Focus event in partnership with WSOC-TV offers you free admission to the Museum all day! Activities will honor Dr. King’s life and legacy.


Tuesday Jan. 18

Great Decisions Lecture Series: CRISIS IN THE CAUCASUS
7:00-8:30pm – Charlotte Country Day School (Cramer Lecture Hall)
Admission: $10 (for individual lecture…discount for series registration)
The Office of International Programs at UNC Charlotte, along with the World Affairs Council of Charlotte, coordinates a local community lecture series annually. Hosted by Charlotte Country Day School, the Charlotte Great Decisions Lecture Series consists of six weekly sessions and is an opportunity for citizens to meet, discuss and learn about some of the issues facing our world.  Each week a local expert from nearby colleges and universities provides additional perspective on the topic of interest and answers questions regarding the information presented in the Briefing Book and through the lecture. Tonight, Dr. Elkhan Mehdiyev, Fulbright Scholar at Duke University will discuss this topic as part of the series. For more information or to register to attend, click below.


HOWARD GORDON (of hit TV series “24”)  – Book Signing
7:00pm – Park Road Books
FREE
The longtime executive producer of the hit TV series “24”, makes his fiction debut with “GIDEON’S WAR,” a tale of political intrigue and international terrorism. Gideon Davis has just 48 hours to bring his rogue agent brother in—before a twisted global conspiracy turns deadly.



Wednesday  Jan. 19

Carlos Flores Vizcarra, Counsel General of Mexico in Raleigh, NC
11:30am – 1:00pm – Mint Museum (UPTOWN), 5th Floor
Tickets: $10 for LACC members, $25 for non-members. 
Latin American Chamber of Commerce (LACC) Speakers series presents Mr. Carlos Flores Vizcarra, the first Consul General of Mexico to serve in the Carolinas. He was appointed by Mexico’s President  Felipe Calderon in October 2009.  In the mid nineties he was elected Federal Congressman, representing the city of Mexico.  He served as Secretary of the Foreign Relations Committee. As member of the Mexican Congress he was actively involved in international multilateral  tasks, such as the Latin American Parliament and the Economic Commission for Latin America.


Eric Mullis's Art and Philosophy Lecture Series
6:30-8:30pm - Hodges Taylor Humanities Campus (401 N. Tryon St.)
Admission: $20
This is the first session of Eric Mullis's Art and Philosophy Series.  Eric Mullis, a professor of philosophy at Queens University of Charlotte, will continue the discussions started in spring 2010 of various aspects about the aesthetics and philosophy of art. Topics include artistic improvisation, dance and dance technology, philosophy and photography, nature aesthetics, and everyday aesthetics/ethics.
Tonight’s lecture discusses Artistic Improvisation: Improvisation is essential for many art forms, but what exactly is going on when an artist improvises?  What makes improvisation possible in the first place?  Why is improvisation valued so highly?
To register to attend, click below:


Thursday Jan. 20


COURAGE: Where Do We Need It Now? A panel discussion with Juan Williams, Janet Murguía, John Payton and John Payton
7:00-9:00pm - McGlohon Theatre at Spirit Square
Tickets: $35 General Admission; $25 for Levine Museum members
In conjunction with the Levine Museum of the New South’s COURAGE exhibit, this panel discussion will focus on the impact of the Brown v. Board of Education decision, as well as race relations and the challenges facing public education today. Panelists include Juan Williams, Civil Rights historian and FOX News commentator; Janet Murguía, president and CEO of National Council of La Raza; John Payton, president and director-counsel of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund; and John Payton former governor of Mississippi. Panelists will answer questions from the audience.


JJ GREY & Mofro
8:30pm – Visulite Theatre (1615 Elizabeth Avenue, Charlotte)
Tickets: $20
Fresh off their nomination for Canada’s top blues award (The BB King International Artist of the Year Award), Alligator Records recording artists JJ Grey & Mofro swing through the Queen City. JJ Grey has written and recorded five albums of original songs steeped in the rhythm & blues, rock, and country soul of his native backwoods home outside Jacksonville, Florida.  In a live performance review in The New York Times, writer Nate Chinen praised JJ's “balance of wildness and cool” describing his music as "Southern swamp rock with undercurrents of Memphis soul. His songs chronicle ambiguous truths and unambiguous urges…"



Friday Jan. 21

“FASCINATIN’ RHYTHM” – Charlotte Symphony
8:00pm – Belk Theatre @ Blumenthal Performing Arts Center
Tickets: $26.50 - $71.50
The Symphony’s new Music Director Christopher Warren-Green leads the orchestra in an all Gershwin program that includes the greatest hits from one of America’s most famous composers. Pianist Orion Weiss joins the Symphony for Rhapsody in Blue, which
will close the concert with a flourish. Earlier in the evening, soprano Jonita Lattimore
brings Gershwin’s greatest songs to the stage – “The Man I Love,” “Our Love is Here to Stay,” “S’Wonderful,” and the ever-popular “Summertime.” Lattimore has been praised
for her “sumptious and lyrical voice,” described by the Chicago Tribune as “a real
treat.”Also performed on Saturday 1/22.


Inaugural ‘UNC CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL’
8:00pm –Anne R. Belk Theatre/ Robinson Hall @ UNC Charlotte
Tickets: $9 general public, $7 for senior citizens and UNC Charlotte faculty and staff, and $6 for students. Discount for series purchases.
The Department of Music of the UNC Charlotte College of Arts + Architecture presents the inaugural “UNC Charlotte Chamber Music Festival”. Under the artistic direction of David Russell, the Anne R. Belk Distinguished Professor of Violin, the UNC Charlotte Chamber Music Festival will present four concerts of chamber music for strings, voice, and piano performed by UNC Charlotte faculty and invited guests.  Performing faculty members from universities across the U.S. and musicians from the Charlotte Symphony will join Department of Music faculty members David Russell (violin), Mira Frisch (cello), Dylan Savage (piano), and Brian Arreola (tenor) in performances of music by Johannes Brahms, Gabriel Fauré, Georges Bizet, and Franz Schubert.
Concerts will be presented on January 21, 23, 25, and 27.


“ [DIS]COMFORT “ - Opening Reception @ McColl Center
6:00-9:00pm –McColl Center for Visual Art (721 N. Tryon Street, Charlotte)
FREE
Moving away from the typical “object driven” goal of making art for profit, artists John Osorio-Buck (current resident artist) and Scott Townsend exhibit their individual work to create a more conceptual art and at times, interactive in nature. Collective identities are questioned while challenging comfort levels about private and public space. 
(Dis)Comfort’s opening reception is in collaboration with the opening of the 2010 Winter Artist-in-Residence Exhibition on the 2nd and 3rd floor galleries. The Center will have light refreshments including a cash bar.


Saturday Jan. 22

Author/Comedian STEVE HARVEY – Book Signing
12:00pm – Barnes & Noble/Arboretum (Pineville-Matthews Rd.)
Best-selling author, actor and comedian Steve Harvey will be signing his newest book, “Straight Talk, No Chaser: How to Find, Keep, and Understand a Man”.  B&N will be distributing a limited number of tickets beginning at 8:00 am on 1/22. NOTE: In order to get in line, you must have a ticket. There are a limited number of tickets available, and they are complimentary. You must purchase at least one copy of Straight Talk, No Chaser from B&N to get a ticket. There is a five-book limit.


BILLY ELLIOT – The Musical
8:00pm – Ovens Auditorium (2700 E. Independence Blvd.)
Tickets: Starting at $30
BILLY ELLIOT THE MUSICAL is the joyous celebration of one boy's journey to make his dreams come true. Set in a small town, the story follows Billy as he stumbles out of the boxing ring and into a ballet class, discovering a surprising passion that inspires his family and his whole community. Based on the international smash-hit film, BILLY ELLIOT is brought to life by a phenomenal cast of 45 and the Tony® Award-winning creative team -- director Stephen Daldry, choreographer Peter Darling and writer Lee Hall -- along with music legend Elton John, who has written what the New York Post calls "HIS BEST SCORE YET!"  Various performances through January 30.


“Southern Baptist Sissies” – Queen City Theatre Company (Regional premiere)
8:00pm - Duke Energy Theatre at Spirit Square
Tickets: $16-$24
Southern Baptist Sissies is a hilarious comedy and an emotional journey of tolerance and acceptance in a world where sometimes the ones who lead and counsel us are not always right. Southern Baptist Sissies opened to rave reviews in Los Angeles during its original run in 2000 and became the most awarded play of the year, winning the GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding LA Theater Production, as well as multiple LA Weekly Theater Awards, Los Angeles Critics Awards, etc. The Chicago Tribune described the play as "Distinctive and arresting. A funny and yet strangely moving treatment of goodhearted, wacky Texans suffering through an intolerant world."  **Queen City Theatre Company will donate a percentage of the proceeds from each ticket sold on ALL performances of to The Trevor Project, with a fundraising goal
of $ 3500.


Sunday Jan. 23

Mint Museum - Art History Series
3:00pm Mint Museum UPTOWN
Free, with admission
UNC-Charlotte Professor Jae Emerling will discuss The Afterlife of Contemporary Art to accompany the current exhibition, New Visions: Contemporary Masterworks from the Bank of America Collection. Registration requested: 704.337.2098 or programs@mintmuseum.org.


Union Symphony Youth Orchestra – Winter Concert, Art Exhibition, Reception
3:00-5:00pm – Marvin Ridge High School (2825 Crane Rd) – Waxhaw, NC
FREE
The Union Symphony Youth Orchestra (USYO) presents its annual winter concert. The program includes selections from BRAHMS, BEETHOVEN, DVORAK, CORELLI, HAYDN, MOZART, SAINT-SAENS and STRAUSS. The concert is accompanied by an art show, at which all works are available for sale. And following the concert, all guests are welcome to a dessert reception. 





2011

Week of January 24, 2011

Monday Jan. 24

GIRL TALK
8:00pm - Fillmore Charlotte
Tickets: $33.50

  • Girl Talk is the pseudonym of DJ and remixer Greg Gillis. Everyone from Pitchfork to the New York Times Magazine has lauded various aspects of Girl Talk’s formula. The sample-based dance tracks have made Gillis a hero of the mash-up generation: each of his songs are built on recognizable samples of recent hit singles, re-contextualized into an entirely new piece. Girl Talk’s 5th album was released in November. http://www.livenation.com/event/0E004562F9D99F02?camefrom=CFC_BUYAT_pollstar&brand=



Tuesday Jan. 25

Great Decisions Lecture Series: HORN OF AFRICA
7:00-8:30pm – Charlotte Country Day School (Cramer Lecture Hall)
Admission: $10 (for individual lecture…discount for series registration)
  • The Office of International Programs at UNC Charlotte, along with the World Affairs Council of Charlotte, coordinates a local community lecture series annually. Each week a local expert from nearby colleges and universities provides additional perspective on the topic of interest and answers questions regarding the information presented in the Briefing Book and through the lecture. Tonight, Dr. Kenneth Menkhaus, Davidson College will discuss the Horn of Africa as part of the series. He regularly serves as a consultant for the UN, US government, non-governmental organizations, and policy research institutes, and has provided expert testimony on two occasions before subcommittees of the US Senate. In 2002 he was recipient of a US Institute of Peace grant to study protracted conflict in the Horn of Africa. For more information or to register to attend, click below.                          http://oip.uncc.edu/great_decisions.htm

THE HARLEM QUARTET (UNC Chamber Music Festival)
8:00pm –Anne R. Belk Theatre/ Robinson Hall @ UNC Charlotte
Tickets: $9 general public, $7 for senior citizens and UNC Charlotte faculty and staff, and $6 for students.
  • The centerpiece of the UNC Charlotte Chamber Music Festival (thru 1/27) will be a concert by guest artists The Harlem Quartet, including works by Dmitri Shostakovich and Sergei Prokofiev as well as contemporary jazz composers Chick Corea and Wynton Marsalis. Praised for its “panache” by The New York Times, the Harlem Quartet is currently the resident ensemble in the New England Conservatory of Music’s Professional String Quartet Program. Its mission is to advance diversity in classical music while engaging young and new audiences through the discovery and presentation of varied repertoire, highlighting works by minority composers. The Harlem Quartet made its acclaimed Carnegie Hall debut in the fall of 2006 and have returned to Carnegie on numerous occasions. In December 2009 the quartet played to performances at the White House for guests of President Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama, and made an appearance on Christmas morning on NBC’s Today Show. http://unccboxoffice.universitytickets.com/user_pages/event.asp?id=246&cid=28

DAVID BROOKS – Op-Ed Columnist/Author
8:00-10:00pm - Charlotte Museum of History
Tickets: Free to members
  • The Charlotte Museum of History’s “Distinguished Speaker Series” returns this winter with David Brooks, Op-Ed Columnist for The New York Times, Commentator for The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer, and Author. David Brooks has a gift for bringing audiences face to face with the spirit of our times with humor, insight, and quiet passion. He is a keen observer of the American way of life and a savvy analyst of present-day politics and with the generous support from WFAE, Your NPR News Source, is free to members of the museum and guest. To check or change your membership status, please call (704) 568-1774 x.102.


Wednesday Jan. 26

Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus *Opening Night*
7:00pm – Time Warner Cable Arena, Charlotte
  • Tickets: Various prices, with opening night discounts.
    The Greatest Show On Earth just got Greater with Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey® Presents Barnum’s FUNundrum!SM. Featuring 130 performers from six continents, almost 100,000 pounds of performing pachyderms, cowboys, pirates, and mermaids, Barnum’s FUNundrum! is a super-sized spectacle so massive you just can’t miss it! This monumental, once in a lifetime event celebrates the 200TH anniversary of the birth of the legendary P.T. Barnum, the Greatest Showman on Earth! and can only be experienced at The Greatest Show On Earth®, Barnum’s living legacy! Through Sunday January 30th. http://www.ticketmaster.com/event/0E00454ECE298882?artistid=1362863&majorcatid=10003&minorcatid=29

BHANGRA Dance Demonstration
7:30-8:30pm – International House, 322 Hawthorne Lane, Charlotte
FREE
  • Join International House for a free demonstration and lecture by Anish V. Thakkar on the art of Bhangra Dance, a high energy folk dance that originated in the Punjab region of India/Pakistan. For more information, contact 704.333.8099.


Thursday Jan. 27


TRICIA WAGNER – Book signing
  • 7:30pm – Barnes & Noble (Morrison Place-4020 Sharon Rd.)
    Come meet local author Tricia Wagner as she leads a discussion of her new book Black Cowboys of the Old West: True, Sensational and Little Known Stories From History.” http://store-locator.barnesandnoble.com/event/3081305

PIERRE BENSUSON
8:00pm – Evening Muse (3227 N. Davidson Street)
Tickets: $20 General Admission
  • French-Algerian guitarist, singer and composer Pierre Bensusan has been described by the L.A. Times as "one of the most unique and brilliant acoustic guitar veterans in the world music scene today.’ In 2008, he was voted "Best World Music Guitar Player" by Guitar Player Magazine Readers Choice. Don’t miss this exciting show!                             http://www.theeveningmuse.musictoday.com/EveningMuse/moreInfo.aspx


Friday Jan. 28


Music & Museum Concert – “Viva España!
5:00pm – Bechtler Museum of Modern Art
Tickets: $15/members; $20/non-members
  • January's concert theme, ¡Viva España!, celebrates Spanish and Argentinean music and features artwork by Joan Miro. The Bechtler Ensemble (Paul Nitsch on piano, David Russell on violin and Tanja Bechtler on cello) will perform Circulo by Joaquin Turina, Oblivion by Astor Piazzolla and Granada by Isaac Albeniz as well as works by Manuel de Falla and Pablo Casals. Also on Sunday 1/30 @ 5:00pm.                 https://purchaseonline.bechtler.org/public/daily_events_list.asp


AIN’T MISBEHAVIN’
8:00 – McGlohon Theatre @ Spirit Square
  • Tickets: $22
    Based on the music of Fats Waller, this hit Broadway musical re-lives the flourishing era of the Harlem Renaissance and turns the stage into a racy, raucous and playful evening of songs. Five performers present their interpretations of what it means to swing, while being backed by the Sign of the Times band, with direction by Jermaine Nakia Lee. *Performances through Sunday Jan. 30.
       


Saturday Jan. 29

What My Mother Told Me: The Art of Maria Magdalena Campos-Pon” – *Opening Day*
10:00am – Harvey G. Gantt Center for African American Arts & Culture
Admission: Free w/museum admission (RSVP to opening is encouraged)
  • According to David Taylor, president & CEO of the Gantt Center, "What My Mother Told Me’ may be one of the most important exhibitions the Gantt Center has mounted to-date." María Magdalena Campos-Pons, a woman, an expatriate, and a Cuban, makes art about identity and memory. Born in Cuba of Nigerian ancestry, Campos-Pons' work of the last 20 years covers an extended range of visual language investigations. It emerges from the early 1980s focus on painting and the discussion of sexuality in the crossroads of Cuban mixed cultural heritage to incisive questioning, critique and insertion of the black body in the contemporary narratives of the present. She has exhibited internationally since 1984 when she won Honorable Mention at the XVIII Cagnes-sur-Mer Painting Competition in France and the Bunting Fellowship in Visual Arts at Harvard in 1993. Solo shows followed at MoMA, the Venice Biennale 2001, Johannesburg Biennial, the First Liverpool Biennial, the Dak'ART Biennial in Senegal and the Guangzhou Triennial in China.                                                http://www.ganttcenter.org/web/page.asp?urh=ExhibitionsViewer&id=12


GAELIC STORM
7:00 – Neighborhood Theatre (511 E. 36th Street - NODA)
Tickets: $15/advance; $20/day-of-show
  • Chart topping Gaelic Storm plays Celtic music that hearkens back to the traditional music of Ireland, but they are hardly traditionalists. Their music adds modern sounds and draws influences from American rock and pop, as well as music styles from around the world. If you’re up for a lively evening of music, this is where you want to be. http://www.neighborhoodtheatre.com/theatre/order/order.asp?shownum=616&eventnum=2222


Sunday Jan. 30

Charlotte Contemporary Ensemble
3:00pm –St. Albans Episcopal Church, Davidson, NC
Tickets: $15; Students & Seniors $10; Children under 12 are FREE
  •  Join Cedric Meekins and the Charlotte Contemporary Ensemble on a journey through a rich blend of music, from traditional Spirituals to Gospel and contemporary choral works, as they celebrate more than 30 years of performances. Featuring the music of African American composers and arrangers, this concert will warm your spirit and soothe your soul.
          http://www.musicatstalbans.net/?page_id=9


Preview Discussion of VERDI's "La Traviata"
4:OOpm – The Wine Shop @ Foxcroft (Southpark/7824 Fairview Rd., Charlotte)
FREE
  •  Opera Carolina presents one of the world’s most beloved operas, La Traviata. The timeless story of Camille is retold in Verdi’s classic of a Parisian courtesan who surrenders to true love. Join WDAV's Jennifer Foster for a lively preview discussion of the opera. Performances of “La Traviata” by Opera Carolina will take place Feb. 3, 5 & 6.                  http://www.operacarolina.org/#




2011

Week of January 31, 2011

MONDAY  JAN.  31

Cult Movie Monday:  “DROP DEAD GORGEOUS
Doors/7:00pm; Movie/8:00pm – Actor’s Theatre of Charlotte (Stonewall St.)
FREE

  • A hilarious “mockumentary” about a small town beauty pageant that turns deadly as it becomes clear that someone will go to any lengths to win. Starring Denise Richards, Ellen Barkin & Kristin Dunst. The theatre (along w/co-sponsor The Light Factory) will even have its own beauty contests following the film, with chances to win fabulous prizes.


TUESDAY FEB. 1

CHARLOTTE CHAMBER MUSIC – First Tuesday Concert Series
12:10 or 5:30pm* – First Presbyterian Church/W. Trade Street (Charlotte)
FREE
  • The clarinet takes center stage as the Blue Ridge Chamber Players and clarinetist John Sadak perform 20th century works including Prokofieff’s beloved Overture on Hebrew Themes and Alan Shulman’s Rendezvous, written for the King of Swing, Benny Goodman. The program concludes with American composer Charles Griffin’s homage to Irish and Appalachian folk music, Weaving Olden Dances, in a new arrangement commissioned by Charlotte Chamber Music.  **Evening concert includes a wine & cheese reception in the Carillon lobby.

Great Decisions Lecture Series: GLOBAL GOVERNANCE
7:00-8:30pm – Charlotte Country Day School (Cramer Lecture Hall)
Admission: $10 (for individual lecture…discount for series registration)

  • The Office of International Programs at UNC Charlotte, along with the World Affairs Council of Charlotte, coordinates a local community lecture series annually. Each week a local expert from nearby colleges and universities provides additional perspective on the topic of interest and answers questions regarding the information presented in the Briefing Book and through the lecture. Tonight, Dr. James Walsh, UNC Charlotte will discuss the Global Governance as part of the series. He is Associate Professor and Associate Chair of the Political Science Department, as well as the Director of the Center for Terrorism, Intelligence and Security Policy @ UNC Charlotte,. He received his doctorate in international relations from American University. For more information or to register to attend, click below.


WEDNESDAY  FEB. 2

7:30pm – Alvarez College Union/C. Shaw Smith 900 Room  (Davidson College)
FREE

·     Davidson College presents Syrian Ambassador to the United States (since 2004) Imad Moustapha, whose  lecture will provide a unique look at the Syrian perspective on political and social dynamics in the Middle East. Prior to his appointment as Ambassador, he was Dean of the Faculty of Information and Technology at the University of Damascus and he  has written extensively about subjects ranging from science and technology, politics, and art.



Conversations with Artists: LANDSCAPE
7:00-8:00pm – Mint Museum/Uptown
FREE

·         Richard Fennell and Margie Stewart, represented by Hodges Taylor Galley, speak about their work and the art on display in the Mint’s galleries. Part of the program includes journal readings and essay excerpts from noted artists represented in the permanent collection.




THURSDAY FEB. 3

Opening Reception: THE ROLE OF WOMEN IN THE MEXICAN REVOLUTION
5:00-7:00pm – Max L. Jackson Gallery/Watkins Building (Queens University)
FREE

  • This photographic exhibition explores the role of women during the Mexican Revolution of 1910. Women fought as soldiers. They travelled with armies performing the work of nurses, cooks and aids. They were also victims of the fighting. The exhibition is made possible with special permission from the Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia de México and support from the Friends of Art at Queens.


OPERA CAROLINA’s “LA TRAVIATA
7:30 – Belk Theatre (Blumenthal Center For Performing Arts )
Tickets: various prices

  • The timeless story of Camille is retold in Verdi’s classic of a Parisian courtesan who surrenders to love. Based on the true romance of Alexander Dumas and Marie Duplessis, La Traviata (the fallen woman) tells the story of Paris’ most famous courtesan, Violetta Valéry, who leaves her destructive life to live with her first real love, Alfredo Germont. But social bias and Violetta’s failing health turn love to tragedy and remorse. Get swept up in grandeur of one of the world’s most beloved operas – La Traviata. Performances also 2/5 & 6.



FRIDAY FEB. 4

UNC Distinguished Speakers Forum:  TAVIS SMILEY
6:00pm – McKnight Hall/Cone University Center – UNC Charlotte
FREE
  • Broadcaster, author, advocate, publisher and philanthropist Tavis Smiley currently hosts the late night television talk show, Tavis Smiley on PBS and The Tavis Smiley Show, distributed by Public Radio International, as well as Tavis Smiley Reports,  four hour-long primetime TV specials also on PBS. He is the first American to simultaneously host signature talk shows on both public television and public radio. In 2009, Tavis Smiley was named one of TIME’s 100 “Most Influential People in the World.” For more information, call: 704 687-5323


 
FIRST FRIDAY @ THE MINT -  EndearMINT
6:00-11:00pm Mint Museum Uptown Charlotte
Admission: FREE for Mint members, $10 for non-members.
  • Tonight is the third of an ongoing evening event series that will be held the first Friday of every month at the new Mint Museum Uptown (500 South Tryon Street). Each First Friday centers on a different theme and features hands-on art activities for all ages, live entertainment, gallery tours, and refreshments.


 
CHARLOTTE SYMPHONY’s “KnightSounds”:  Tangos & Tapas
6:30pm – Knight Theatre/Levine Center for the Arts - Charlotte
Tickets: $30 (includes appetizers, museum admission and a drink ticket)

  • The Symphony welcomes guest conductor Maximiano Valdes, violinst Elena Urioste, and Metropolitan Ballroom dancers Clement Joly &Tatiana Kazakova to the KnightSounds stage for Tangos & Tapas, a program of exotic music from four Latin countries – Argentina, Brazil, Mexico, and Puerto Rico. The sensuous rhythms will inspire you to kick up your own heels at the post-concert salsa dance party, featuring salsa band Orquesta Mayor, in the new Mint Museum. Meet new friends, mingle with musicians, and experience the orchestra in a whole new way.



SATURDAY FEB. 5

Family Day @ the Bechtler Museum of Modern Art
10:00am – 4:30pm – Bechtler Museum, 420 South Tryon Street
Admission: FREE for 18 yrs old and under; discounted $4 tickets/General admission

  • Family Day provides special museum tours and hands-on art activities for children of all ages. Art projects take place from noon to 4:30 p.m. in the museum’s classroom and video gallery. Family-friendly tours are offered on the hour from noon until 4 p.m. and highlight the exhibition Four Artists in Ascona: Benazzi, Bissier, Nicholson and Valenti, which opened January 21.


OPEN STUDIO SATURDAY:  McColl Center for Visual Art
11:00am-4:00pm – McColl Center (721 N. Tryon St., Charlotte)
FREE

  • During Open Studio Saturdays artists work in their studios with the doors open.  It is an opportunity for the public to meet the artists and learn about their art as well as view the current exhibition. 


CALIFORNIA GUITAR TRIO
8:00pm – Evening Muse (3227 N. Davidson St., Charlotte)
Tickets: $15 in advance

  • The trio first met in England while studying with iconic King Crimson guitarist Robert Fripp. After touring together as part of Fripp’s League of Crafty Guitarists, the three guitarists convened in Los Angeles and founded The California Guitar Trio. Their music has been featured extensively on NPR, NBC’s Olympics coverage, and various CBS, CNN, and ESPN TV programs.



SUNDAY FEB. 6

“JAIL NO BAIL” – 50th Anniversary Film Screening
3:00pm – Levine Museum of the New South (Charlotte)
FREE

  • This special screening showcases a new documentary, “Jail, No Bail”, about the Civil Rights sit-ins that took place in Rock Hill, SC in 1961. The screening will be followed by a panel discussion featuring Charles Jones, David Williamson, and others who took part in the historic events. Presented in partnership with South Carolina ETV and The Culture & Heritage Museums.  RSVP to 704.333.1887 ext. 501 or rsvp@museumofthenewsouth.org.


Tango & Tea
2:00-6:00pm – Amelies French Bakery (2424 N. Davidson Street, Charlotte)
FREE

  • Guillermo Bill will be playing the music….come and enjoy an afternoon of fun filled tango, milonga and vals.



 




2011

Week of February 7, 2011

Monday  Feb. 7

ROBERT PLANT & The Band of Joy  w/the North Mississippi Allstars
8:00pm - Ovens Auditorium, Charlotte
Tickets: $57.50 - $91.60

  • Band of Joy was the name of rock icon Robert Plant’s Black Country psychedelic folk group of the late ‘60s (pre-Led Zeppelin) and his revival of its name and spirit in 2010 is of no small significance. His top selling 2010 Grammy nominated album titled “Band of Joy ” pays tribute to American country + folk. Don’t miss this living rock legend’s swing through Charlotte!


Tuesday Feb. 8

Music & Movies @ The Mint
6:00 – music; 7:00 – movie
Admission: FREE/Members; $5/Non-members

  • As part of their “Let’s Get Reel” series, on the 2nd Tuesday of each month, The Mint welcomes you to stop by and hear some live music (by the Ocie Davis Trio, this week). Then settle back and watch a screening of Kathryn Bigelow’s Academy Award winning  film “THE HURT LOCKER.”


Lecture:  "SANCTIONS and PROLIFERATION: North Korea and Iran"
7:00-8:30pm – Charlotte Country Day School (Cramer Lecture Hall)
Admission: $10 (for individual lecture…discount for series registration)

  • The Office of International Programs at UNC Charlotte, along with the World Affairs Council of Charlotte, coordinates this "Great Decisions Lecture Series" annually. Tonight, Dr. Chris Van Aller, Winthrop University will discuss Sanctions and Proliferation: North Korea and Iran, as part of the series. Dr. Van Aller is Professor of the Political Science @ Winthrop University. He received his doctorate in foreign affairs from the University of Virginia. He specializes in International Relations, Post Soviet Politics, and European Politics.  For more information or to register to attend, click link above.

Wednesday  Feb. 9

Get To Know The Show: ELLA
6:00pm – Harvey B. Gantt Center (Charlotte)
FREE (RSVP required)

·     Always wanted to know more about Ella Fitzgerald (or musical theater) but were afraid to ask? Join members of the cast of Ella at the Gantt Center and get to know the show before you go. It's a life lived out loud in this exhilarating new musical about "The First Lady of Song." This production weaves myth, memory and music as it tells the uplifting and poignant story of one of the greatest jazz/pop vocalists of 20th century music. **Click the link above for special discount offers for the show, which runs 2/11-13.



Thursday Feb. 10

“Race: Are We So Different?”  -  WFAE’s ‘Charlotte Talks’ Taping
7:00pm (Doors/6:30) – Discovery Place (301 N. Tryon Street, charlotte)
FREE

·         Charlotte Talks is headed to Discovery Place for a special show recording. Host Mike Collins and guests will talk about the science and history of race, and the development of a new exhibit at Discovery Place that encourages visitors to explore the origins and impact of race around the world. Guests will be Dr. Jonathan Marks, Anthropology Professor at UNC Charlotte and John Mackay, President & CEO at Discovery Place.



Friday Feb. 11

CHARLOTTE SYMPHONY – Romeo & Juliet
8:00pm – Belk Theatre @ Blumenthal Performing Arts Center
Tickets: $26.50 - $82.50

  • The greatest love story ever told receives full musical expression in this romantic Valentine’s concert. In between the brooding and beautiful tales of young love, the CSO’s own concertmaster, Calin Lupanu, performs Tchaikovsky’s spectacular violin concerto, one of the most famous – and most difficult – pieces for that instrument. With Christopher Warren-Green, conducting and Calin Lupanu, violin, the program features TCHAIKOVSKY Romeo and Juliet and Violin Concerto in D major and PROKOFIEV Excerpts from Romeo and Juliet.

SWEENEY TODD
8:00pm – Halton Theatre/CPCC
Tickets: $5 - $18

  • Sweeney Todd is a musical thriller by Stephen Sondheim. A chilling, suspenseful, heart-pounding masterpiece Sweeney Todd tells the infamous tale of the unjustly exiled barber who returns to 19th century London seeking revenge against the lecherous judge who framed him and ravaged his young wife. His thirst for blood expands to include his unfortunate customers, and the resourceful proprietress of the pie shop downstairs soon has the people of London lining up in droves with her mysterious new meat pie recipe!

BIG DADDY BLUEGRASS BAND “The Next Generation”
9:00pm – Visulite Theatre
Tickets: $10 advance/$12 day-of-show

  • The Big Daddy Bluegrass Band rides again! It has been five long years since the BDBB has taken the stage. They make their return tonight for the debut of their new lineup which features some of the premier acoustic musicians working today. Steve “Big Daddy” McMurry, front man and founding member of Acoustic Syndicate, returns to the world of bluegrass music with a formidable arsenal of hot, young pickers. There are always great, guest musicians at their performances and you never know who will turn up to play.


Saturday Feb. 12

MALIN PERIERA – “Conversations With Contemporary Black Poets
2:00pm – Park Road Books (Charlotte)
FREE



CHARLOTTE CHILDREN’S CHOIR:  A Knight To Remember
7:00pm – Pritchard Memorial Baptist Church (1117 South Blvd., Charlotte)
Admission: $25/General; $35/Reserved; $290/Table of 8
  • A "Knight" to Remember, in preparation of the upcoming tour to Scotland, is a cabaret style concert highlighting individual members of the Charlotte Children’s Choir Youth Chorale and Chamber Ensemble. Enjoy an evening of listening to timeless love songs ranging from contemporary popular music, jazz standards and favorite arias while you enjoy a wonderful meal. The CCC has won recognition for choral excellence in their appearances around the world. The Choir performed on “CBS This Morning” and was featured in the A & E television special, “Judy Collins Christmas at the Biltmore.” The choir made its Carnegie Hall debut as the featured choir at the 2005 National Children’s Choir Festival.

Sunday Feb. 13

Music & Museum Concert:  Chamber of Love: Sizzling Duets
5:00pm (reception)//5:30 (performance) – Bechtler Museum of Modern Art (Charlotte)
Admission: $15/members; $20/non-members
  • Sounds of love will fill the Bechtler lobby February 13 when the museum presents a special Valentine's Day Music and Museum program. Chamber of Love: Sizzling Duets will feature music composed by Rachmaninoff, Casals, Kreisler, Gliere and Richard Strauss paired with artwork by Jean Tinguely and Niki de Saint Phalle, two Bechtler collection artists who were partners in art and life.




2011

Week of February 14, 2011

MONDAY  Feb. 14

Guitarist/Songwriter DAN BERN
7:00 & 9:30pm – Birdsnest, 102 S. Main Street, Davidson
Tickets: $20 ($1 from each ticket sold will be donated to Habitat for Humanity)

  • Don’t miss the chance to see folksinger Dan Bern with two Valentines Day concerts in this intimate setting. Email davidsonncmusic@hotmail.com to reserve tickets, making sure to specify what time and how many tickets


TUESDAY Feb. 15

Great Decisions Lecture Series:  RESPONDING TO THE FINANCIAL CRISIS
7:00-8:30pm – Charlotte Country Day School (Cramer Lecture Hall)
Admission: $10

  • The Office of International Programs at UNC Charlotte, along with the World Affairs Council of Charlotte, coordinates a local community lecture series annually. Tonight, Dr. Richard Buttimer, UNC Charlotte will discuss Responding To The Financial Crisis as the final lecture of the series. Dr. Buttimer, who has a PHD from the University of GA, is Interim Associate Dean for Faculty and Research as well as Professor of Finance at UNC Charlotte. He has published papers in many academic journals and is a member of the editorial board of The Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics. His primary areas of research are the development of mortgage default models and the application of options theory to real estate problems.


FLOGGING MOLLY (the 7th annual Green 17 Tour)
6:30pm – Fillmore Charlotte
Tickets: $35.25

  • Don’t miss Flogging Molly’s exhilarating and explosive live show with their unique blend of traditional Irish music and rowdy punk rock. This L.A. based septet’s annual tour countdown to St. Patrick’s Day will also feature music from their upcoming spring release, recorded in Asheville. Also appearing is Moneybrother and The Drowning Men.



WEDNESDAY  Feb. 16

Opening Reception: BODY & SOUL
6:00-9:00pm – Middleton McMillian Gallery (The Light Factory – Charlotte)
FREE

·         Since the early 19th Century, photographers have experimented with figurative subject matter. Mysterious and sensual, intense and innocent, spiritual and corporeal, photographers MONA KUHN, JOYCE TENNESON & JOCK STURGES explore the abstract potential of the human body.



BLUE DOOR – Opening Night
8:00pm – Actor’s Theatre of Charlotte  (650 E. Stonewall St., Charlotte)
Tickets: $24 - $29


  • Three generations of men (all played by the same actor), from slavery through Black Power, challenge Lewis to embark on a night journey combining past and present. Infused with abundant humor and woven through with original songs, BLUE DOOR is a tour-de-force for two actors, a vivid, exuberantly theatrical play about the African-American male experience. “Intelligent…unfailingly thought-provoking…Barfield poses sharp questions and counter-questions on contemporary black identity. Her vision is fearless and humane.” - The Los Angeles Times


THURSDAY Feb. 17

RICK STEVES,  Author/Television Host
6:00-8:00pm – Westin Hotel (601 S. College Street, Charlotte)
Tickets: $50 members; $65 non-members

·         Take advantage of this unique opportunity to meet and talk to Rick Steves, TV personality and host of popular public TV series “Rick Steves Europe” as he speaks to the World Affairs Council of Charlotte.  He will share his wealth of knowledge about building a global perspective through thoughtful travel for a broader understanding of issues impacting our world today.  He will also share travel tips. Heavy hors d’oeuvres and wine will be served.


Film Screening:  GUY & MADELINE ON A PARK BENCH
7:30pm – Hodges Taylor Art Consultancy  (401 N. Tryon – Transamerica)
Tickets: $5/Light Factory members; $7/non-members

  • A full-fledged musical that recasts the MGM tradition in a gritty, near-documentary style. It tells the story of a young Boston jazz musician who drifts from affair to affair, his trumpet the only constant in his life. Jason Palmer, its star, was recently named by Down Beat Magazine as one of the top twenty-five “Trumpeters for the Future.” The film features all original music composed by Justin Hurwitz and recorded by the Bratislava Symphony Orchestra.



FRIDAY Feb. 18

Friends of THE MINT Lecture: UNIVERSITY MUSEUMS
10:00-11:30am – Mint Museum/Randolph (2730 Randolph Road)
FREE, with museum admission

  • Dr. Kimerly Rorschach, Director of the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University, talks about why universities have museums.

Tony® Award Winning Musical: IN THE HEIGHTS
8:00pm – Belk Theatre @ Blumenthal Performing Arts Center
Tickets: $54.50-$74.50

  • IN THE HEIGHTS, winner of four 2008 Tony® Awards including BEST MUSICAL, is a sensational new show about chasing your dreams and finding your true home. You will be taken on an exhilarating journey into a vibrant Manhattan community; a place where the coffee is light and sweet, the windows are always open, and the breeze carries the rhythm of three.  ***Ticket holders for the February 18th performance of IN THE HEIGHTS will have the unique opportunity to attend a pre-show event featuring a cocktail hour (cash bar), free hors d’oeuvres, and salsa dancing led by dancers from Metropolitan Ballroom! To SAVE $10 on tickets to IN THE HEIGHTS on Friday, February 18th visit www.BlumenthalCenter.org/salsa or call 704.372.1000 and ask for the “salsa” special!

SATURDAY Feb. 19


WINTER BIRDING DAY
9:00am-3:00pm – Daniel Stowe Botanical Gardens
FREE, with garden admission

  • Expanding on the popular Bluebird Day of the past two years, the Garden celebrates our winged friends with a day of birds. Enjoy bird watching walks, demonstrations and mini-talks scheduled throughout the day, including the annual update on the Gardens' Bluebird Program. For a small fee, build your own bluebird house and mix up a suet treat for the feathered friends in your yard at home. ** A materials fee of $10 will apply for optional Bluebird house and Suet projects.
    Partnering Organizations: NC National Wildlife Federation affiliates, Gaston County P.A.W.S. and Mecklenburg County H.A.W.K.

Charlotte Film Society presents: HOWL
7:00pm-doors/7:30pm-screening – Theatre Charlotte, 501 Queens Rd., Charlotte
Tickets: $5/members; $8/non-members

  • 2010 film about the legendary poem by beat icon Allen Ginsberg -- played by Hollywood actor James Franco. -- and the 1957 obscenity trial that followed its publication.

RED PRIEST
8:00pm – Dana Auditorium/Queens University (Charlotte)
Tickets: $20/General Admission; FREE/students

  • The Friends of Music at Queens proudly hosts Red Priest, an acoustic foursome founded in 1997 and named after the flame-haired priest Antonio Vivaldi. Red Priest is the only early music group in the world to have been compared in the press to the Rolling Stones, Jackson Pollock, the Marx Brothers, Spike Jones and the Cirque du Soleil. The group has given sold-out concerts at many of the world’s most prestigious festivals, including the Hong Kong Arts Festival and Prague Spring Festival. Their repertoire ranges from obscure 17th century sonatas to the most famous works of Bach and Vivaldi, all presented in imaginative programs with cinematically inspired titles: “Priest on the Run,” “Nightmare in Venice,” “Pirates of the Baroque” and “Johann, I’m Only Dancing!”


SUNDAY Feb. 20

MINT MUSEUM  – “Sunday Fun Days
1:00-4:00pm – Mint Museum/UPTOWN (500 S. Tryon St.)
FREE, with museum admission
  • It’s family time Uptown! Try out a new scavenger hunt in the museum galleries, see a performer or artist demonstrating, and enjoy kid-friendly activities. Each month the museum will celebrate a new theme. This month’s theme:  Art, Supersized!




2011

Week of February 21, 2011



Tuesday Feb. 22
Levine Museum’s New South for the New Southerner
5:30pm – Levine Museum of the New South (200 E. 7th Street)
Admission: $10/person; Museum members/FREE

  • Levine Museum of the New South presents its "New South for the New Southerner," an educational program for newcomers and native, Hosted by Levine Museum historian Dr. Tom Hanchetts. High-profile newcomers to Charlotte include Kathleen Jameson from Houston, director of the Mint Museum, and Christopher Warren-Green from London, conductor of the Charlotte Symphony. They'll share their personal puzzlements with Charlotte, plus tips for getting along in the Queen City. Program includes wine and dinner from Mert's Heart & Soul.


A Scholar’s Forum:  MEXICO: The Once and Future Revolution
7:00-8:30 – Charlotte Museum of History
Admission: FREE/members; $5/non-members (reservations required-see below)

  • Come hear a lecture by Jurgen Buchenau, Professor, The University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Chair, Department of History. Dr. Buchenau’s research interests include 19th and 20th century Mexico, Immigration, Mexico in world affairs, and the Mexican Revolution. He is currently writing a biography of General Alvaro Obregón, who commanded the winning faction in the Mexican Revolution (1910-1920).  Dr. Buchenau has also begun work on a book that will examine economic development, corruption, and political leadership to reconsider the consolidation of Mexican state in the 1920s and 1930s. ***Reservations are required: email programs@charlottemuseum.org  or call 704.568.1774.


Wednesday  Feb. 23

MOMIX: Botanica
7:30pm – Knight Theatre @ Levine Center for the Arts (430 S. Tryon)
Tickets: $20-$54

·    In this highly anticipated engagement, MOMIX (internationally renowned contemporary dance company) brings its breathtaking fantasy piece BOTANICA to Charlotte. BOTANICA transports you to a fantasy world of surreal images and childlike wonder. Set to an eclectic score that ranges from birdsong to Vivaldi, BOTANICA reveals nature’s changing imagery in an unforgettable multimedia experience. Through Sunday 2/27.




Thursday Feb. 24

Global Issues Forum:  FREDRIK STANTON,  Author
11:00-12:45pm – Tate Hall/CPCC (1201 Elizabeth Ave., Charlotte)
FREE & open to the public – RSVP Required to attend (click link below)

·         Central Piedmont Community College’s (CPCC) Global Issues forum, together with the World Affairs Council of Charlotte, will host Author Fredrik Stanton on the College’s Central Campus. Stanton will discuss his latest book titled, “Great Negotiations: Agreements that Changed the Modern World.” Whether you’re a history buff or a literary aficionado, Stanton’s presentation will remind you of the decisions that have made or broken our national history and demonstrate how the art of negotiation can change the world by establishing peace among nations.



“TOPOGRAPH”: An Anthology Celebrating The NOVELLO FESTIVAL Of READING
6:30pm – Sykes Auditorium/Queens University
FREE

  • Charlotte ViewPoint, Novello Festival Press, the Queens MFA in Creative Writing program and The Arts at Queens host a reading of “Topograph,” a literary anthology celebrating the 20th anniversary of the Novello Festival of Reading. The anthology offers a fresh sketch of the current Southern literary landscape, including one-minute stories, fractured prose poems, fragmented pulp fiction and inventively structured memoirs. The book is a collaboration between Novello Festival Press and Charlotte ViewPoint, a community-based nonprofit organization that advances metropolitan ideas and art. Book contributors include MFA faculty Alan Michael Parker and Katherine Min. Prior to the reading, editor Jeff Jackson will answer audience questions about literary publishing and editing.



Friday Feb. 25

World Affairs Council of Charlotte presents:  Ambassador DAVID ADELMAN
12:00-1:30pm – Westin Charlotte (601 S. College St.)
Tickets: $45 (WACC members); $60 (non-members)

  • The U.S. Ambassador to Singapore will discuss: Why Asia? Why ASEAN? Why Now? - How to be a Winner in the Global Marketplace. Prior to his confirmation, Ambassador Adelman served as a State Senator in the Georgia General Assembly and as an Assistant Attorney General in Georgia.  For the past twenty years he worked with the national law firm Sutherland Asbill & Brennan LLP.  He has taught courses in political science as an instructor in the Honors Program at the University of Georgia.  For many years Ambassador Adelman represented indigent veterans on a pro bono basis before the United States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims, as well as served as a legal adviser to the state of Georgia’s largest domestic violence organizations.


Author Reading/Signing:  LISA NAPOLI
7:00pm – Park Road Books (4139 Park Road)
FREE

  • Come meet journalist LISA NAPOLI, as she reads from her new book “Radio Shangri-La: What I Learned in Bhutan, the Happiest Kingdom on Earth.” Ms. Napoli writes of a period when she was dissatisfied with her life and her work as a radio journalist when a chance encounter with a handsome stranger presents her with an opportunity to move halfway around the world. She decides to leave behind cosmopolitan Los Angeles for a new adventure in the ancient Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan—said to be one of the happiest places on earth - and helps to start Bhutan’s first youth-oriented radio station, Kuzoo FM. Lisa Napoli has worked as a journalist for NPR (public radio show Marketplace), a columnist at the New York Times CyberTimes, and an Internet correspondent at MSNBC. She began her career at CNN, worked in local news in North Carolina, and has directed several documentaries about Southern culture.


ROWING TO AMERICA: The Immigrant Project
8:00pm – Robinson Hall/Lab Theatre (UNC Charlotte)
Tickets: $5

  • Frequently comic, sometimes tragic, and often poetic, Rowing To America explores the experience of immigration, emigration, and migration through a myriad of culturally diverse one-act plays. These plays are directed, designed, and performed by students in the Department of Theatre and represent a clear but simple aesthetic approach to production and performance.


 
Saturday Feb. 26

FLAG OF HOPE Project
2:00-5:00pm – Gil Gallery  (109 West Morehead St.,Charlotte)
FREE

  • The Flag of Hope is a social art project that will travel to 10 cities across North Carolina to promote multicultural awareness and hope within our diverse communities. Artist Edwin Gil will collect handprints and signatures on large canvases that will be fashioned into the nation’s first ever flag made with the handprints of North Carolina residents. Gil is a contemporary conceptual artist best known for his vibrant colors and proprietary paint technique used to achieve depth and movement in his works.

The Met: Live in HD presents: Gluck’s Iphigénie en Tauride
1:00pm – Stonecrest @ Piper Glen + AMC Concord Mills 24
Tickets: $18-$24

  • Susan Graham and Plácido Domingo reprise their starring roles in Gluck’s nuanced and elegant interpretation of this primal Greek myth. Tenor Paul Groves also returns to Stephen Wadsworth’s insightful production, first seen in 2007. Patrick Summers conducts.



Sunday Feb. 27

Winter Garden Walk & Plant Sale @ UNC Charlotte
1:00-3:30pm – UNC Charlotte Botanical Gardens (9090 Craver Rd.)
FREE

  • Join staff of the Botanical Gardens for an informative stroll through the delights of the Susie Harwood Garden. Yes, there is much to appreciate in a southern garden in winter – berries, bark, structure, and even flowers. Come enjoy this overlooked season, learn about some plants to add to your own winter garden, and choose from a prime selection of winter plants for sale. A short slide presentation will precede the garden walk.

Music & Museum Concert:  Back to Brahms
5:00pm – Bechtler Museum of Modern Art
Tickets: $15/museum members; $20/non-members (seating is limited)

  • The Bechtler Ensemble is joined by special guest violinst Rosemary Furniss this evening. Furniss is one of the most respected violinists of her generation and is acclaimed for her solo performances and collaborations with renowned orchestras and conductors (including her husband, newly appointed Charlotte Symphony conductor Christopher Warren-Green who also leads the London Chamber Orchestra where Furniss shares the role of Artistic Director and Concertmaster). For this performance, the musical work of Brahms will be paried with the artwork of Julius Bissier. Bissier is featured in the exhibition Four Artists in Ascona: Benazzi, Bissier, Nicholson and Valenti on view now through July 5 in the museum's second-floor gallery.






2011

Week of February 28, 2011


Monday  Feb. 28


Cult Movie Monday:  SHAFT
7:00pm/Doors; 8:00pm/Screening – (Actors Theatre of Charlotte, 650 Stonewall St.)
FREE
  • The Light Factory and Theatre 650 present this month’s Cult Movie Monday feature: SHAFT, the genre-defining blackploitation film,  directed by Gordon Parks. Come watch John Shaft -  the ultimate in suave black detectives. He first finds himself up against Bumpy, the leader of the Black crime mob, then against Black nationals, and finally working with both against the White Mafia who are trying to blackmail Bumpy by kidnapping his daughter.


Tuesday Mar. 1

Charlotte Chamber Music – 1st Tuesday concert
5:30pm – First Presbyterian Church (200 W. Trade St), Charlotte
FREE

  • Feel the excitement of the bullfight and revel in the flair of the Fandango as you experience the flavour of Spain with classical guitarist Robert Teixeira and friends. From the intimate to the extroverted, enjoy an Iberian musical fiesta right here in Charlotte. Selections include: Joaquin Turina: La Oracion del Torero ; Luigi Boccherini: Guitar Quintet #4 in D “Fandango.”  Musicians for this concert are Robert Teixeira, guitar; Peter deVries and Kari Giles, violins; Vasily Gorkovoy, viola; Tanja Bechtler, cello. These concerts are performed by leading local and regional professional musicians that Charlotte Chamber Music compensates. The evening concert includes a wine and cheese reception in the Carillon Lobby.



Wednesday  Mar. 2


Movie Screening:  ORGASM, INC.
7:00pm – McColl Center for Visual Art
Tickets: $7

·         The McColl Center for Visual Art is pleased to host a screening of the shocking and hilarious newly released documentary ORGASM, INC. Tickets are only $7 for this extraordinary movie which captures the cash-fueled pharmaceutical industry and fevered marketing campaigns to introduce Viagra for Women. This movie promises to entertain as well as educate women from all walks of life, all backgrounds, all political persuasions, and all preferences.



Thursday Mar. 3


DORIS KEARNS GOODWIN,  Presidential Historian
7:00pm – Dana Auditorium/Queens University
Tickets: $40

·         One of the most recognized historians of the day, Doris Kearns Goodwin provides trenchant, informed and enthralling commentary on current events. Author of several best-selling books, Goodwin won the Pulitzer Prize in history for “No Ordinary Time: Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt: The Home Front in World War II.” Her book “Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln” won the prestigious Lincoln Prize and the inaugural Book Prize for American History. A consultant interviewed extensively for PBS and the History Channel’s documentaries on LBJ, the Kennedy family, Franklin Roosevelt and the Lincolns, Goodwin offers a keen perspective as a presidential historian and political news analyst.


7th ANNUAL CHARLOTTE JEWISH FILM FESTIVAL –  Opening Night!

7:00pm – Sam Lerner Center for Cultural Arts/Jewish Community Center

Admission: FREE

  • In honor of NASA’s 50th Anniversary, the Charlotte Jewish Film Festival (March 3-13) will open with a screening of the 2010 documentary film: AN ARTICLE OF HOPE. An uplifting message of humanity, AN ARTICLE OF HOPE tells the remarkable story of Israel’s first astronaut and the journey of a tiny Torah scroll into outer space. Israeli Air Force Colonel Ilan Ramon and six other astronauts perished on Feb. 1st, 2003, when the Space Shuttle Columbia disintegrated upon reentry. Among the few objects that Ramon took into space was a miniature Torah that had survived the Concentration Camps of the Holocaust.  **Tiffany Russell, from NASA, will be the special guest speaker.


CIRQUE DU SOLEIL

8:00pm – Charlotte Motor Speedway

Tickets: $38.50 - $212.50

  • CIRQUE DU SOLEIL returns to Charlotte MARCH 3- 20 with a brand new live production:  TOTEM! Somewhere between science and legend TOTEM explores the ties that bind Man to other species, his dreams and his infinite potential.



Friday Mar. 4

MATTHEWS HAS TALENT!  (a Benefit for Matthews Playhouse)
7:30pm – Matthews Community Center (100 E. McDowell Street, Matthews)
Tickets: $10
  • This benefit (which runs through Sun. 3/6) was created to showcase the local talent in our community and to support Matthews Playhouse and Theatre Matthews. For 16 years Matthews Playhouse has enriched the lives of performers and audience members alike with high quality plays and performances. This variety show will celebrate solo, small and large groups who have been invited to or successfully auditioned for a spot in the shows. Top performers will be recognized with a final showdown on the last evening.


JAZZ @ THE BECHTLER
6:00-8:00pm – Bechtler Museum of Modern Art
Tickets: FREE w/museum admission

  • Experience the sounds of 1930s and '40s France when the Ziad Jazz Quartet performs the music of Django Reinhardt and Stephane Grappelli. Featured songs include Nuages, Limehouse Blues, Minor Swing, Django, After You’ve Gone and Exactly Like You.


LECTURE:  Lady Young on ''Churchill's Sculptor''
6:00pm – Max L. Jackson Gallery/Watkins Bldg/Queens University
FREE

  • This illustrated lecture about the life and works of Oscar Nemon, Sir Winston Churchill's sculptor, is given by his daughter Lady Young. The lecture traces Nemon's life from his birth in Croatia in 1906 to his very last sitting with Diana, Princess of Wales in 1985. Nemon sculpted many of the leading statesmen and royalty of the 20th century including the Queen, the Queen Mother, Margaret Thatcher and President Eisenhower. The lecture is presented with support from The English Speaking Union of the United States and the Friends of Art at Queens. Reception to follow the lecture.


Saturday Mar. 5


MOTÖRHEAD  (w/Clutch)
8:00pm – Fillmore Charlotte
Tickets: $41.50

  • Motörhead's overwhelmingly loud and fast style of heavy metal was one of the most groundbreaking styles the genre had to offer in the late '70s. Currently on their 35th anniversary tour, in support of their latest album “The World Is Yours,” don’t miss Lemmy and the band for a classic hard rock show! Be sure to also catch opening band CLUTCH, for some amazing, bluesy, hard rock.


Davidson Community Players present:  MASTERPIECE
8:00pm – Armour Street Theatre (Davidson, NC)
Tickets: $10-$18

  • Davidson Community Players explores visual art with the thrilling premier of Masterpiece by the award-winning author Meir Ribalow. Based on the actual events of the 20th Century’s most notorious forgery scandal, the drama follows Flemish artist Han van Meegeren who successfully forges a 'masterpiece' by Dutch painter Johannes Vermeer to retaliate against a hostile and powerful art critic. The painting is sold to the Nazis, and it is not until nine years later that a mysterious investigator appears and the unraveling begins. "A mesmerizing thriller about what constitutes great art and the relationship between love, art, and the truth." --Broadway World


Sunday Mar. 6


2011 ART OF THE BLACKSMITH
1:00-4:00pm – Latta Plantation (5225 Sample Road, Huntersville, NC)
FREE, with site admission

  • 19th century blacksmiths on the grounds providing demonstrations. 


YASMIN LEVY
7:00PM – McGlohan Theatre @ Spirit Square (Blumenthal Performing Arts ctr)
Tickets: $19.50 - $24.50

  • Levy is one of the artists at the forefront of reviving and preserving Ladino, a collective term for the Judeo-Spanish languages that date back to the 15th century in Spain. In her deep, spiritual and moving style of singing, Levy preserves and revives the most beautiful songs from the Ladino/Judeo-Spanish heritage, mixing it with Andalusian Flamenco. Her “Romance & Yasmin” created a stir amongst world music lovers across the globe. She’s performed at Carnegie Hall, with Jools Holland on his TV show in England and at WOMAD festivals. See why The Guardian says Levy "deserves global recognition... (her music is) powerful, passionate & intriguing. “




2011

SOLIDWORKS 2011 Helps Turn Good Ideas into Great Results

Focus on Speed and Collaboration Enables Design Teams to Work More Productively and Profitably




2011

Media Advisory: SolidWorks World 2011, Jan. 23-26, San Antonio




2011

DS SolidWorks Corp. Announces SolidWorks Education Edition 2011-2012

Students Who Use SolidWorks in the Classroom are Poised for Early Career Success




2011

Joy during the Festival of Smiles 2011

More than 800 children were impacted by the Festival of Smiles 2011 that took place in the indigenous community of Talamanca, Costa Rica.




2011

Japan Tsunami Update 28/05/2011

Since it was announced publicly that OM Japan were ready to receive volunteers, many people wrote to express interest and requested for more information. This past week (23 - 27 May), OM Japan took their first volunteer group, consisting of 3 foreigners and 4 Japanese to Miyagi prefecture to help with clearing up rubble and bringing encouragement.




2011

Getting REAL at TeenStreet 2011

Teens learn about the REAL Jesus of the Bible and how to have a REAL relationship with Him at TeenStreet 2011 in Offenburg, Germany.




2011

university board of trustees 2011

university board of trustees 2011




2011

April 22, 2011




2011

Reus (2011) / directed by Pablo Fernández, Eduardo Piñero, Alejandro Pi [DVD].

Montevideo : BuenCine Producciones, [2011]




2011

The PHD movie (2011) / directed by Vahe Gabuchian [DVD].

[U.S.A.] : Piled Higher and Deeper Publishing, LLC, [2012]




2011

La fuerza del destino : la historia de Iván y Lucía (2011) / created by María Zarattini ; written by Claudia Velazco, María Zarattini ; directed by Benjamín Cann, José Ángel García [DVD].

Universal City, CA : Vivendi Entertainment, [2011]




2011

Titan Securities Ltd. - Disclosures under Reg. 29(2) of SEBI (SAST) Regulations, 2011




2011

GATI LTD. - Disclosures under Reg. 31(1) and 31(2) of SEBI (SAST) Regulations, 2011




2011

GATI LTD. - Disclosures under Reg. 31(1) and 31(2) of SEBI (SAST) Regulations, 2011




2011

GATI LTD. - Disclosures under Reg. 31(1) and 31(2) of SEBI (SAST) Regulations, 2011




2011

GATI LTD. - Disclosures under Reg. 31(1) and 31(2) of SEBI (SAST) Regulations, 2011




2011

GATI LTD. - Disclosures under Reg. 31(1) and 31(2) of SEBI (SAST) Regulations, 2011




2011

Dhanuka Agritech Ltd. - Disclosures under Reg. 29(2) of SEBI (SAST) Regulations, 2011




2011

L.G.Balakrishnan & Bros.Ltd. - Disclosures under Reg. 29(1) of SEBI (SAST) Regulations, 2011




2011

Ashutosh Paper Mills Ltd. - Disclosures under Reg. 29(1) of SEBI (SAST) Regulations, 2011




2011

Dhanuka Agritech Ltd. - Disclosures under Reg. 31(1) and 31(2) of SEBI (SAST) Regulations, 2011