free things to do in New York City
Free events for Wednesday, 11/11/09
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Free Events, Free Things to Do in New York City!  Read More

Are you looking for free things to do in New York City (NYC) on November 11, 2009?

66 free events take place on Wednesday, November 11 in New York City. Don't miss the opportunities that only New York provides! Exciting, high quality, unique and off the beaten path free events and free things to do take place in New York today, tonight, tomorrow and each day of the year, any time of the day: whether it's a weekday or a weekend, day or night, morning or evening or afternoon, December or July, April or November! These events will take your breath away!

New York City (NYC) never ceases to amaze you with quantity and quality of its free culture and free entertainment. Check out November 11 and see for yourself. Summer or Winter, Spring or Fall! Just click on any day of the calendar above and you'll find most inspiring and entertaining free events to go to and free things to do on each day of November . Don't miss the opportunities that only New York provides!

Some events take place all year long: same day of the week, same time there are there for you to take advantage of. One of the oldest free weekly events in Manhattan is Dixieland Jazz with the Gotham Jazzmen, which happen at noon every Tuesday. Another example of an event that you can attend all year round on weekdays is Federal Reserve Bank Tour, which takes place every week day at 1 pm (but advanced reservations are required). You can take at least 13 free tours every day of the year, except the New Year Day, July 4th, and the Christmas Day. If you are classical music afficionado, you can spend whole day in New York going from one free classical concert to another. If you love theater, then New York gives you an option to attend plays and musicals free of charge, or at deep discount. You just need to have information about it. And we are here to make that information available to you.
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The quality and quantity of
free events,
free things to do
that happen in New York City
every day of the year
is truly amazing.

So don't miss the opportunities
that only New York provides:
stop wondering what to do;
start taking advantage of
free events to go to,
free things to do in NYC
today!

66 free things to do in New York City (NYC) on Wednesday, November 11, 2009

All events are free unless otherwise noted.
        

Workshop | Daily Instructed Meditation


Learn some serenity at the end of your busy day.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:30 am
Free

Other | Ice Skating in the City


The 170' x 100' rink features free admission ice skating. Whether you are looking to skate before going to the office, through the lunch hour, with friends at a party, with a date, or for a spin under the stars at a holiday party, this is the perfect destination.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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8:00 am
Free

Tour | Federal Reserve Bank Tour


Learn about central banking functions that Federal Reserve System performs and see Bank's vault of international monetary gold on bedrock of Manhattan Island, five stories below street level. Learn why Federal Reserve has "Federal" in its name, while it's a private bank, not Federal at all. Congressman Ron Paul considers the Federal Reserve "both corrupt and unconstitutional" Five tours daily on the hour.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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9:30 am
Free

Tour | Cathedral Tour


Explore the Cathedral's newly cleaned and restored Nave. Learn about the art, architecture and history of this great sacred space from 1892 to the present.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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11:00 am
$6

Workshop | Making Ends Meet


A 2-hour workshop with Cornell educator Cheryl Hines. Come join the fun and learn how to: (1) Create a household spending plan that works for you (2) Use money management tools and techniques to stretch your money and (3) Use resources that are available in your community.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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11:00 am
Free
11:00 am
Free
11:00 am
Free

Park Walk | Veterans Day Memorial Walk


Combine a walk through the park with a look at how different generations of New Yorkers viewed the park as a proper place to remember their veterans.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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11:00 am
Free

Other | Oral Cancer Screenings


Screenings are on a first-come first-served basis. No appointment is needed. Testing is quick and painless.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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12:00 pm
Free

Performance | Performance Art: Alicia Framis' Lost Astronaut


An ongoing performance-installation exploring the potentialities of living on the moon through the ironical and fictional character and activities of a woman astronaut. Left on Earth like all women who were never part of the moon race, she settles in to BaseCamp, in which she will live for the 2 weeks of the biennial in a customized astronaut suit, among drawings and prototypes that aim to both parody and demand women’s presence on the moon. Her activities will be pre-determined by scores written by invited authors and artists, and the audience will be able to interact with her in BaseCamp or as she wanders the streets of New York City. Today's participating writer is Frances Richard. Framis (b. Barcelona, Spain, 1967) creates work that investigates notions of national and group identities, the social mechanics of cities, and personal safety. She has exhibited internationally at institutions such as Museum Reina Sofia, Madrid, Spain; Centre Pompidou, Paris; Moderna Museet, Stockholm; Mass MOCA, North Adams, MA; Triennale Yokohama, and the Venice Biennale.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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12:00 pm
Free

Park Walk | “Views from the Past”


As you promenade through the heart of the Park, imagine yourself living in 19th Century New York City. Learn about the Park's history and how its designers, Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux, struggled to create the magnificent "Greensward" for the enjoyment of all. Tour lasts approximately one hour.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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12:00 pm
Free

Talk | Strategy Serving Tactics—Iraq, Afghanistan, and the New Way of American Warfare


“Strategy Serving Tactics: Iraq, Afghanistan, and the New Way of American Warfare,” with Colonels David Gray and Gian Gentile. Two serving Army Colonels will talk about their recent combat experience in Iraq and Afghanistan and provide their assessment of the problems with the current American approach to Afghanistan.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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12:15 pm
Free

Concert | Alisa Weilerstein, cello, performs Bach suites


Program: Bach, Suite No. 2 in D minor, BWV 1008 Weilerstein is internationally renowned as one of the premiere soloists and chamber musicians of her generation. Weilerstein has appeared with many ensembles, among them the orchestras of Baltimore, Cleveland, Minnesota, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and San Francisco, as well as the New York Philharmonic and National Symphony Orchestra. An ECHO “Rising Star” and alumna of Lincoln Center’s Chamber Music Society Two program, she has performed as recitalist and chamber musician at the world’s top concert halls and festivals. Her praised debut recording was released on EMI classics, and she was the recipient of an Avery Fisher Career Grant.
   New York City, NY; NYC
12:30 pm
Free

Tour | Cathedral Tour


Explore the Cathedral's newly cleaned and restored Nave. Learn about the art, architecture and history of this great sacred space from 1892 to the present.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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1:00 pm
$6

Jazz | Valerie Capers, singer/pianist


With John Robinson, bass.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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1:00 pm
$7 suggested donation

Tour | “Waterways and Vistas”


Walk from the Dairy to Belvedere Castle, and learn about the intricate design of Central Park's web of pastoral landscapes and formal romantic vistas.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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1:00 pm
Free

Concert | Repast Baroque Ensemble performs German Baroque Trio Sonatas


Founded in New York City, the ensemble was a finalist in the Early Music America/Naxos Recording Competition in 2003. The program will feature works by J.S. Bach, Dietrich Buxtehude and Philipp Heinrich Erlebach, performed by Repast members, Amelia Roosevelt (baroque violin), John Mark Rozendaal (baroque violoncello and viola da gamba), and Avi Stein (harpsichord).
   New York City, NY; NYC
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1:15 pm
Free

Lecture | Artist Michael Joo talks about his work


A lecture by artist Michael Joo, whose work focuses on the process through which the human body, flora, and fauna consume invisible calories, and the crystallized byproducts of this consumption process. In his works Joo combines making art with the apparently scientific theme of production of matter-energy and with the expenditure of calories of the human being during physical and psychological effort to achieve a state of diversity.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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3:15 pm
Free

Author Reading | Juliet Wentworth discusses her cookbook Something Sweet, plus samples


The longtime Public Theater concessions manager gives away samples of baked goods made from recipes in her theatrically themed cookbook. Wentworth's culinary career began as an avocation, at The American Place Theater, and led to her operating food counters at more than a dozen New York City Theaters, running a New Jersey restaurant and catering countless area corporate and residential social events.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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3:30 pm
Free

Conference | Shock and Awe: The Troubling Legacy of the Futurist Cult of War


F.T. Marinetti and the Futurists celebrated war and Italian colonialism as part of their avant-garde program. In the 1920s and 1930s, Futurist art, music, poetry and performance were dedicated to the cult of aviation and the belligerent military policies of Fascism. On the occasion of the centenary of Futurism, Performa invited well-known art historian Emily Braun to create a symposium specifically addressing this issue, tackling the uneasy, if powerful, alliance of modernist art and politics. Programs include: Shock and Awe: The Futurist Vision of the Air Emily Braun, Distinguished Professor Postal Bombs: Futurist Propaganda Lynda Klich, Assistant Professor of Art History The Futurist Cult of Speed Vs. Women’s Time and Space Lucie Re, Professor of Italian and Women’s Studies, UCLA On the Military History of Art: Douhet, Marinetti, and “The Command of the Air” David Lewis, The Graduate Center, CUNY The Photo In Pieces: Aviation and Photomontage in Bruno Munari Maria Antonella Pelizzari, Associate Professor of Art History Marinetti’s Bombshell Ernest Ialongo, Assistant Professor of History, Hostos College, CUNY Roberto Rossellini’s Un Pilota Ritorna: Reflections On the Futurist/Fascist Cult of War Ruth Ben-Ghiat, Professor of Italian Studies and History, NYU The Venice Biennale At War Laura Beiles, Department of Education, The Museum of Modern Art Wounds of War: The FIlms of Yervant Gianikian and Angela Ricci Lucchi Robert Lumley, Professor of Italian Cultural History, University College London A Brief History of Strategic Bombing Elihu Rose, Adjunct Associate Professor of History, NYU
   New York City, NY; NYC
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4:00 pm
Free

Opening Reception | 1989: The End of History or the Beginning of the Future?


Video Art Comments on a Paradigm Shift: 14 video films from international artists revolving around various aspects of repression and revolution, politics of memory, the fall of the Iron Curtain and the hopes and delusions connected to the alleged end of history. The Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Austria, Mr. Michael Spindelegger, will be in attendance.
   New York City, NY; NYC
5:00 pm
Free

Opening Reception | Women Veterans Art Exhibition: Tears Dried Solid


An exhibition of work by participants of the Women Veterans Art Therapy Group. The participants come from varied service backgrounds and military branches and have been meeting weekly to process the myriad issues of military and civilian life.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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5:30 pm
Free

Workshop | Daily Instructed Meditation


Learn some serenity at the end of your busy day.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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5:45 pm
Free

Discussion | Artists Daniel Lichtman and David Baumflek host The Institute for Aesthetic Research


A program of public events, talks and discussions focused on art, economics and institutional critique. They will attempt to translate the traditional role of the “think tank” into the sphere of cultural production and visual art. As the traditional think tank situates itself between the academy, special interests and government, the IAR will consider how to place itself critically within the circuits of distribution and legitimization of aesthetic objects and ideas. The IAR will itself be an experiment in the dynamics of cultural-political discourse.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Tour | LightMappingNYC Walk


LightMappingNYC is intended to provide the New York City lighting design community with a forum to consider the current, past and future conditions of their urban environment at night. By combining the local/national interest in this topic generated by the IESNYC/DLFNY Lights Camera Walk map with the global scope of PLDA’s Lightmapping initiative, this program will underscore the vital role of lighting design in making New York City after dark.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Concert | Moira Danis performs from her CD Beautiful Sounds -- The Songs of Petula Clark


The enchanting Danis returns with her newest CD of both songs that Ms. Clark made famous, as well as some written by this 60's pop singer.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Performance | Performance Art: GIRLMACHINE


An investigation of Futurism’s ambiguous vitality and its complex relationship to the modern body, exploring notions of masculine identity and mechanized erotics in the form of a Futurist club of men, women, and objects created by a collective of artists from art, theatre, architecture, and music. Performed by Jenn Dees, Clara Galante, Elke Luyten, Alice Stern, Mai Ueda and Joshua Seidner. Created and directed by Carlos Soto and Charles Chemin, installation by Christian Wassman, music by Tristan Bechet, light by Eugene Tsai, and produced by Luisa Gui. Assistant Direction: Elena Gui. Installation Assistants: Manasi Pandey, Tien Ling, and Zachary Salinger-Simonson.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
$10 suggested donation

Performance | Performance Art: Emily Mast's Everything, Nothing, Something, Always (Walla!)


The medium of theater has been adapted to an exhibition context in order to stage a conversation-cum-argument between five characters who represent various aspects of the artist’s psyche. Through spoken language and movement, these representations of the complex self turn the artistic process inside out for the viewer, thus opening it up for examination. The performance itself is a time-based installation that takes the form of a one-act live theatrical play looping for three hours, varying slightly with each repetition and simultaneously acting as a performative “sculpture” in the center of the exhibition space, visible from all angles. The characters on stage are faced with seated actors who play a (very reactionary) artificial audience. The actual audience is encouraged to question their role in the space: they watch not only the play, but also another audience watching a play, all the while looking across the exhibition space and through the play at each other. Embracing artifice, caricature and parody, the script teases out earnest existential dilemmas in the face of artistic production via melodrama, cliché, and self-reflexivity. The result is simultaneously sincere and ironic, humorous and serious. Emily Mast is endlessly inclined to consider the nature of nothingness. She works primarily with performance, installation and writing. She has had solo shows at Samson Projects in Boston, The Paris Project Room in Paris and the Roski Gallery in Los Angeles. She has collaborated with numerous actors, dancers, writers, composers, choreographers, musicians and visual artists in Paris, Mexico, Portland and Los Angeles. She was a resident artist at Skowhegan in 2006 and participated in the Mountain School of Art in LA and United Nations Plaza in Berlin in 2007. In 2008 she curated the show “Egoesdayglo” at Five Thirty Three Gallery in Los Angeles. Free popcorn. Visitors are encouraged to drop by anytime between 6-9pm. There is no official beginning or end.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Colloquium | Ten Days for Oppositional Architecture: Towards Post-Capitalist Spaces


The transformation of the urban landscape within the last decades has increasingly been dominated by the demands of capitalist utilization. Due to the current crisis, however, which goes far beyond a mere crisis of the real estate and financial market, these neoliberal politics and attendant forms of production of space have been subject to a loss of legitimation. For this reason, not only do the dominance and promises of the privatization model, the free market and private property have to be questioned, but also the conventions of the space-producing professions that follow and materialize these policies. In this context, the event “Ten Days for Oppositional Architecture” takes up the task of exploring possibilities and conditions of a socially committed architectural practice. Therefore the narrow boundaries of the profession have to be left behind. Invited are activists, geographers, architects, planners, and economists representing different critical approaches to discuss and develop concepts and practices that not only try to oppose and challenge the capitalist mode of production of space, but also try to go beyond it strategies of de-commodification, re-appropriation and alternative production of space. They will look at already existing spatial actions of resistance as well as search for possibilities to further theorize them: How can these strategies and alternative practices be turned into social and political forces towards post-capitalist spaces?
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Discussion | Unnatural Causes: Is Inequality Making Us Sick?


A special screening and panel discussion of the PBS series Unnatural Causes: Is Inequality Making Us Sick? In response to recent reports highlighting escalating and disproportionate rates of diabetes and obesity in low-income communities, leading scholars explore the role that biological and social determinants of health play in the ever-widening wellness gap. Invited speakers include Lorraine Mongiello, CUNY Campaign Against Diabetes; Holie Jones, faculty member at Medgar Evers College; and Kimberly Libman.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Discussion | The Lineup: Recurring Characters in Crime Fiction


A panel with Lee Child, John Connelly and Carol O'Connell, moderated by Otto Penzler. A great recurring character in a series you love becomes an old friend. You learn about their strange quirks and their haunted pasts and root for them every time they face danger. But where do some of the most fascinating sleuths in the mystery and thriller world really come from? In the anthology, The Lineup, Otto Penzler has gathered the best crime writers of today to tell the stories behind the detectives they've created. John Connolly was born in Dublin, Ireland and is a contributing writer to The Irish Times. His first novel, Every Dead Thing, was published in 1999, and introduced the character of Charlie Parker who has been featured in seven of Connolly's novels. Carol O'Connell is the author of eleven books, ten featuring Kathy Mallory, most recently Bone by Bone. She lives in New York City. Lee Child has written thirteen novels featuring drifter Jack Reacher, including most recently Gone Tomorrow. He is also the editor of the anthology Killer Year. Otto Penzler is the proprietor of The Mysterious Bookshop in New York City, and the editor of many mystery anthologies, including The Encyclopedia of Mystery and Detection, for which he won an Edgar Award. He lives in New York.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:30 pm
Free

Discussion | Artist Barbara Crane in Conversation


Crane’s intimate Polaroids from the 1980s hone in on private human gestures performed in public at Chicago’s summer festivals. In conversation with Barbara Hitchcock.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:30 pm
Free

Gallery Talk | Changing and Alternative Functions of Art Spaces


Alanna Heiss, artist Nancy Hwang and curator Sandra Skurvida will speak about the changing and alternative functions of art spaces. Heiss will share her trailblazing experience of the alternative space movement in New York since the 1970s. The talk is hosted in conjunction with the exhibition AVANT-GUIDE TO NYC: Discovering Absence. Alanna Heiss, Director of Art International Radio, was Founder and Director of P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center from 1976-2008. She is one of the originators of the alternative space movement, beginning with Under the Brooklyn Bridge, a 1971 outdoor show she organized with installations by pioneering American and European artists. Heiss has curated and/or organized over 700 exhibitions at P.S.1 and elsewhere, including the inaugural exhibition at P.S.1, Rooms (1976); New York, New Wave (1981); Stalin's Choice: Soviet Socialist Realism, 1932-1956 (1993); Greater New York (2000 and 2005, selecting curator), and Arctic Hysteria (2008); as well as solo shows including Robert Grosvenor (1976); Keith Sonnier (1983); Alex Katz: Under the Stars, American Landscapes 1951-1995 (1998); John Wesley: Paintings 1961-2000 (2000), and Gino De Dominicis (2008). In 2004, Heiss founded Art Radio WPS1.org, the Internet radio station of P.S.1. Born in Louisville, Kentucky, in 1943, Heiss received a BA from Lawrence University and a scholarship from the Lawrence Conservatory of Music. In 2001, Heiss received an Honorary Doctorate in Fine Arts from the San Francisco Art Institute, and in 2008, she received an Honorary Doctorate in Humane Letters from Lawrence University in Appleton, Wisconsin. Nancy Hwang holds an MFA in Sculpture from Cranbrook Academy of Art and a BA from the University of Maryland. She has received grants from the Seoul Foundation for Arts and Culture (2005), Agnes Gund and Daniel Shapiro (2002), Artists Space Independent Project Grants (2002), and the Rema Hort Mann Foundation (2001), among others. Her solo projects include This is not a couch., Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, Kansas City, Missouri (2008); Host, Project Space Sarubia, Seoul, Korea (2005); Platform, White Columns, New York (2004); and S, Storefront fro Art & Architecture and New York City Parks & Recreation (2002). She has participated in numerous group exhibitions including Something from Nothing, Contemporary Art Center, New Orleans, Louisiana (2008); ev+a, Limerick, Ireland (2005); Make It Now: New Sculpture in New York, SculptureCenter (2005); Grapefruit: Yoko Ono in 1964, Ise Cultural Foundation, New York (2004); and Get that Balance, Kampnagel, Hamburg, Germany (2001). She lives in New York City. Sandra Skurvida is an independent curator and scholar based in New York. Her curatorial projects to date have been catalyzed by social and political issues: Custom Car Commandos (Art in General, 2009) dealt with the crisis in the auto industry; Soap Box Event by Pia Lindman (Federal Hall National Memorial, 2008) - with the civil liberties of free speech; several public art projects in New York City (Art Container, 2002; Waste Management by Alex Villar, 2005) addressed various aspects of public space; and the Third Annual Exhibition of Soros Center for Contemporary Art in Vilnius, Lithuania (1995) — post-Cold War conditions and the emergence of global networks. Skurvida is researching and writing on John Cage's interdisciplinary influences
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:30 pm
Free

Author Reading | Contributors read from A New Literary History of America


A reading in celebration of this anthology of 225 new essays edited by Greil Marcus and Werner Sollors—beginning with the year 1507, when the word “America” first appeared on a map and ending with a portfolio by Kara Walker on the election of Barack Obama. Participating contributors and editors include Farah Griffin, Greil Marcus, Ann Marlowe, John Rockwell, Werner Sollors, and Stephanie Zacharek.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:30 pm
$5

Workshop | Do's and Don't of the College Application Process


How do you make your application stand out from the pack? A panel of seasoned admissions consultants and experts in the field of higher education demystify the application process and discuss how you can best articulate your personal voice.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:30 pm
Free

Lecture | New Perspectives on African Architecture & Urbanism


This will explore contemporary African cities as unique built environments. Through many distinguished practitioners of architecture, urban planning and architectural theory the lectures will probe this emerging field of discourse and its global relevance and applicability. Abosede George, assistant professor at Barnard College, specializes in African history, women’s history, urban history of Africa, and the history of childhood in Africa. Her article “Feminist Activism and Class Politics: The Example of the Lagos Girl Hawker Project” is forthcoming Women’s Studies Quarterly 35 (2007). She is currently working on a book project about the history of juvenile justice in 20th-century Lagos, Nigeria.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:30 pm
Free

Discussion | Peruvian photographer Milagros de la Torre discusses her work


De la Torre will discuss the complex issues raised by her rich and varied body of work in a conversation with Kristen Lubben, associate curator at the International Center of Photography, and Miriam Basilio, an assistant professor of Art History and Museum Studies. In her quietly powerful still-life photographs, de la Torre evokes issues of violence and memory. In English.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:30 pm
Free

Concert | Pianists of Steinhardt


This cocktail-hour concert features the talents of Steinhardt pianists, joined by performers from vocal and instrumental performance. Reception to follow.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:30 pm
Free

Performance | Viva Futurism! Revolution & Utopia


A lively evening of bilingual spoken word, swirling images, and shocking sounds that illuminate links between Futurism and Mexican and Latin American art of the early 20th Century.
   New York City, NY; NYC
6:30 pm
Free

Discussion | 3 artists discuss “The Nerve of Drawing”


This panel features artists whose interpretation of drawing expands the definition of the genre. Selected from the gallery’s database of artists, Mariana Hoferer, Richard Howe and Joanne Howard will present and discuss their work. The panel will be moderated by Florence Neal, artist, Director and Co-Founder of the Kentler International Drawing Space in Red Hook, Brooklyn. Refreshments served.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
$5

Performance | Erratic Anthropologies, a Show of Performance Projects


Performance projects by Guy Benfield, Shana Moulton, and Rancourt/Yatsuk that mine the artifacts and visual culture of defunct utopian communities. Drawing from sources ranging from primitivist references in hippie culture to the latent promise of prosperity intrinsic to American suburbanite culture, these performances use narrative strategies to seek the transformative and transcendental processes that define the psychological profile of contemporary western societies.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
Free

Reading | Harper’s Magazine Presents: The Family Table with Rivka Galchen, Ben Marcus, and David Samuels


To coincide with Thanksgiving, Harper’s presents a reading with its contributors on the theme of “the Family Table”—eating, fighting, anguish, and the American form of gratitude. Featuring selections from the magazine and new work by the writers Rivka Galchen, author of Atmospheric Disturbances, Ben Marcus, author of the novel Notable American Women, and David Samuels, Harper’s Contributing Editor and author of Only Love Can Break Your Heart.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
Free

Discussion | Eat Your Words: When Writers Speak of Food


A conversation between author Agnes Desarthe (Chez Moi) and Mary Ann Caws. Reception to follow.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
Free

Discussion | Ecological Debt: Embodied Debt


With financial meltdowns, climate warmups, and widespread inurement to the promises of democracy, our social movements are seeking some basis for common political analysis, one that is sex-gender literate and culturally inclusive. Please join Ariel Salleh for a presentation and discussion of an integrated feminist framework for building an ecological and social commons. Salleh wrote the groundbreaking Ecofeminism As Politics and recently edited Eco-Sufficiency and Global Justice, a collection of essays that bridges the span between academic and activist conversations.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
$5 suggested admission

Staged Reading | Gunilla Boëthius and Marianne Goldman's Loving Selma Lagerlöf


A Swedish play translated by Verne Moberg, directed by Robert Greer, featuring Mary Keefe as Selma, Elise Rovinsky as Sophie, and Ingrid Kullberg-Bendz as Valborg. This new drama is based on the recently opened archives of personal correspondence and records, recreating the authentic drama of the lives of this legendary writer's circle. The play premiered earlier this year to enthusiastic reviews in Falun and later in Sundsvall, Sweden.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
Free

Screening | Guy Ben-Ner's Untitled: A Conversation With Himself About How Art Can Serve Life


Filmed and edited over the course of twelve months, Israeli artist Ben-Ner will present an unusual “live film,” that captures an ongoing phone conversation between the artist and himself as he flies to and fro between Berlin and Tel Aviv, the respective locations of his girlfriend and his family. Unlike a regular film, which is edited externally after all of the shooting is complete, Ben-Ner’s film never leaves the camera during a twelve-month period. The film always remains “live,” awaiting the next shot, which might take place in either Israel or Germany. Ben-Ner’s “storyboard” is life itself, and each scene occurs in real time, although with significant ellipses in between. Since the only editing is done entirely in-camera, the move from one shot to the next requires a real physical move: the camera traveling the full distance from Tel Aviv to Berlin and back as the dialogue progresses. Shot in Hebrew, and subtitled in English, the film presents a conversation in rhyme, which discusses how art can be at the service of life and the repercussions of such a unified relationship.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
Free

Author Reading | Jonathan Hafetz reads from his book The Guantanamo Lawyers: Inside the Prison, Outside the Law


Hafetz, ACLU attorney and editor of The Guantanamo Lawyers, discusses his new book with Joshua Colangelo-Bryan and Julia Tarver Mason, attorneys with law firms actively involved in defending the rights of Guantanamo Bay detainees.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
Free

Author Reading | Mary Weiland discusses Fall to Pieces


Weiland -- a fashion model who married Stone Temple Pilots' Scott Weiland -- describes the extreme highs and lows of her life, the volatility of which long hinted at mental illness.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
Free

Symposium | Moving Pictures: Motion and Illustration


A one-day symposium exploring the ways in which motion—through animation, performance, and time-based media—has expanded narrative possibilities in the field of illustration. Faculty member Lauren Redniss, Slate music editor Jody Rosen, author Joel Smith, and artist and writer Richard McGuire will discuss how motion has revolutionized illustration, while providing a historical context to explore the future of the discipline.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
Free

Performance | Performance Art: Bernd Krauß's iSLAND kEEPER


Exhibition by day and theater at night, iSLAND kEEPER stakes out new territory for artist Bernd Krauß. The live interpretive staging of the film The American Soldier by Rainer Werner Fassbinder aims to mimic Goethe’s model of education based on the dilettante’s exploration of masterworks via direct practice, using a minimum of means to enact a process that becomes more important than a piece fulfilled in all its possibilities. Presented by the collective Theater Societaet, of which Krauß is a founding member, the performances will unfold within a circular metal railing inserted into the center of the largest part of the Wyoming Building.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
Free

Author Reading | Wayne Koestenbaum reads from his book Jackie Under My Skin


Koestenbaum’s cult classic, first published in 1995. This book, which The Boston Globe called “pop interpretation at its finest,” is a passionate investigation of the ways Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis transformed America’s definition of celebrity, identity, and style. In a gallery of fantasies and tableaux, Koestenbaum explains the late first lady’s hold on Americans by examining the myths and metaphors that we’ve attached to her. An exuberant paean to a great star, Jackie Under My Skin is also a meditation on fame, mortality, and the difficulty of defining desire.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
Free

Staged Reading | Work-in-Progress: Backswing by Steve Kronovet


Part of the theater's "Octoberfest" event.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
$10 suggested donation...

Staged Reading | Work-in-Progress: River Road by Erik Brogger


Part of the theater's "Octoberfest" event.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
$10 suggested donation...

Author Reading | Actress Isabella Rossellini joinsToby Talbot to discuss The New Yorker Theater and Other Scenes from a Life at the Movies


Talbot, author and co-owner of pioneering art house cinema The New Yorker Theater, joins her husband Dan and actress Isabella Rossellini to discuss her career and her new book detailing the highs and lows of the thrilling era in filmmaking.
   New York City, NY; NYC
7:30 pm
Free

Talk | Clawing at the Limits of Cool: Miles Davis, John Coltrane and the Greatest Jazz Collaboration Ever


A talk and book signing with Farah Jasmine Griffin and Salim Washington. When Miles Davis invited the young John Coltrane to join his quintet in 1955, a collaboration was born that would change the landscape of jazz. In their new book, Griffin and Washington focus on the profound implications of this collaboration.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:30 pm
Free

Concert | Indie Music: Rioux / Nobody Can Dance / Beast Make Bomb


"A one man band bringing foot-tapping, head-bobbing psychedelic pop, Rioux's live act errs on the line of a DJ show and performance art." (-Glenn Van Dyke). Nobody Can Dance is "a special blend of [the] Rolling stones (before they were collecting social security), the Allman Brothers, the Black Crowes and at times the Replacements—all with a more indy, fuck it, and younger edge.” (-Nick Sansano) Beast Make Bomb is a 4 piece rowdy, funky group of kids recovering from debauchery of the night before.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:30 pm
$5

Concert | Opera Moments II



   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:30 pm
Free

Author Reading | Stephen Foreman discusses her book Watching Gideon


Foreman presents his book, a poignant, moving portrait of a father and son, a snapshot of America's rugged, gritty history, and a fast-paced story of lust, greed and self-satisfaction.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:30 pm
Free

Dance Performance | 4 different takes on contemporary dance


Cornfield Dance, Catherine Young, You Are Free Dance Company, and Erin Cairns.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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8:00 pm
$3 or more...

Concert | Downtown Symphony performs Haydn and Mendelssohn


Program: Haydn's Military Symphony Mendelssohn's Scottish Symphony
   New York City, NY; NYC
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8:00 pm
Free

Performance | Performance Art: Alexandre Singh's 3 Lectures + 1 Story = 4 Evenings


A series of narrative performances. Taking the mantle from Homer, Singh will be reciting from memory “The Alkahest,” a series of interwoven tales featuring golems, monks, parrots, 20th-century abstract painters, and the creation of the world. In addition, he will be giving three lectures, entitled “The Assembly Instructions,” consisting of a series of rhapsodic academic discourses delivered while two overhead projectors display a variety of images collaged by Singh, forming the backbone of a meandering discussion that ranges from Ikea to Giordano Bruno, and from Snow White to oranges. Currently based in New York, Singh explores a variety of media and exhibition formats, working in literature, collages, installations and performances. His works often combine elements of reality with fiction, reassessing historical and narrative conventions and questioning systems of knowledge and interpretation. Recent projects include The Marque of the Third Stripe, a series of environmental installations based upon a gothic novella written by Singh, reimagining the life of Adi Dassler, founder of the Adidas sports empire. Singh was born in Bordeaux in 1980.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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8:00 pm
Free
8:00 pm
Free

Staged Reading | Work-in-Progress: Look We Are Breathing by Laura Jacqmin


Part of the theater's "Octoberfest" event.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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8:00 pm
$10 suggested donation...

Other | The Inwood Astronomy Project: Look at the Stars through a Telescope


THIS WILL OCCUR ONLY ON CLEAR NIGHTS, SO PLEASE CALL AHEAD TO CONFIRM. Come look through a telescope at the stars. The Inwood Astronomy Project is the largest public outreach program in New York City, hoping to get 5000 New Yorkers to come look through a telescope for the first time. They will be giving away posters, postcards, and other doodads. There is always a telescope to look through, and a knowledgeable astronomer to answer questions. Bring a flashlight for the climb to the hilltop. Call for details.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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8:30 pm
Free

Performance | Performance Art: GIRLMACHINE


An investigation of Futurism’s ambiguous vitality and its complex relationship to the modern body, exploring notions of masculine identity and mechanized erotics in the form of a Futurist club of men, women, and objects created by a collective of artists from art, theatre, architecture, and music. Performed by Jenn Dees, Clara Galante, Elke Luyten, Alice Stern, Mai Ueda and Joshua Seidner. Created and directed by Carlos Soto and Charles Chemin, installation by Christian Wassman, music by Tristan Bechet, light by Eugene Tsai, and produced by Luisa Gui. Assistant Direction: Elena Gui. Installation Assistants: Manasi Pandey, Tien Ling, and Zachary Salinger-Simonson.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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9:00 pm
$10 suggested donation

Performance | Funaticos: Free Comedy Central Taping


Top Latino comics will showcase their best material exclusively for Comedy Central mobile. Featuring: Erik Rivera, Dustin Ybarra, Carlos Santos, Luis Gomez, Bethany Van Delft, Mark Viera, and Cesar Cervantes.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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9:30 pm
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Play | Broadway Actors in a Modern Adaptation of The World Classic

Regular Price: $59
CFT Member Price: $0.00

Concert | Christmas Concert

Regular Price: $55
CFT Member Price: $0.00
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