Friends of the Library

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Friends of the Library Events Archive

For current events click here.

 

PAST LECTURES and EVENTS


Exhibit

Labryinth by Motoi Yamamoto

September-December 2006

Addlestone Library Rotunda

Co-Sponsored by the Friends of the Library and the Halsey Institute for Contemporary Art

Motoi Yamamoto, an artist from Japan, created an intricate labyrinth of salt in the center of the Addlestone Library Rotunda. Using hundreds of pounds of common table salt, the artist spent several weeks creating this work of art. The exhibit attracted visitors from across the city and was featured in the "Chronicle of Higher Education."


Winthrop Roundtable

Guest Speaker: Philip K. Howard on "The Death of Common Sense"

October 19, 2006

Sponsored by Friends of the Library

Philip K. Howard, is author of The Death of Common Sense: How Law is Suffocating America. He has contributed regularly to the op ed pages of The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal and advises both the Republican and Democratic leadership about regulatory reform.


Book Talk

Syndicated humor columnist Celia Rivenbark
November 13, 2006
Q&A and book signing immediately following.
Co-Sponsored by the Friends of the Library, Women and Gender Studies, and Student Life


Exhibit

A Tribute to Kings

January 2007

As part of the campus-wide events in honor of Martin Luther King, the library hosted exhibit of John Daso’s portraits of Reverend and Coretta Scott King in the rotunda of the library.


Exhibit

The New Orleans Project

January 2007

Two C of C students created a photo montage of post- Katrina New Orleans to promote awareness and raise funds to support relief efforts.


Book Talk

January 23,2007

Katherine Chaddock and Carolyn Matalene spoke about their recent book, College of Charleston Voices: Campus and Community through the Centuries. Their talk focused on early race relations through the Civil Rights Era at the College of Charleston. Following their talk, President Emeritus Ted Stern and the Honorable Lucille Whipper spoke of their roles and recollections to create a diverse campus during the 1970s.


Documentary Film

"An Inconvenient Truth"

January 18, 2007

Presenter: PROF. MITCHELL COLGAN, Chair, Geology and Environmental Geosciences and Director of NASA’s South Carolina Space Grant Consortium.


Documenatry Film

"Arithmetic, Population, and Energy: Forgotten Fundamentals of the Energy Crisis"

January 25, 2007

Presenter: Professor Reid Wiseman Biology Department.


Documentary Film

Kilowatt Ours

February 12, 2007

Presenter: Tim Willard, Executive Board Member, Sustainable Campus Initiative (SCI); Environmental Studies (Graduate Student)


Panel Discussion

February 8, 2007

"Alternative Energy in South Carolina"

Moderator: F. Scot Fitzgerald, Geology Department (Senior Student).

Panelists: Ary Fun, Southeast Biodiesel; Jonathan Brown, citizen activist; Ben Hilke, Green Builder; and Liz Kress, Santee Cooper.


Documentary Film

"Who Killed the Electric Car"

February 13, 2007

Presenter: Professor Seth Pritchard, Biology Department


Guest Speaker

Febrary 15, 2007

C.D. Wright on the craft of writing poetry

Co-sponsored by the English Department and the Creative Writing


Guest Speakers

Photographer Deborah Luster and poet C.D. Wright ~ in conjunction with One Big Self: Prisoners of Louisiana exhibition at the Halsey Institute.

Friday, February 16, 6:00 p.m.

luster

Alumni Hall, Randolph Hall (second floor)

One Big Self is a remarkable collaborative book and exhibition of the photographer, the poet and the inmates in three Louisiana prisons. Photographs by Luster and text by Wright can be viewed in an ongoing exhibit at the Halsey Institute which opened January 19 and runs through March 2. The event is sponsored by the Friends of the Library; the Halsey Institute; Charleston School of Law; Office of the Provost; School of Humanities and Social Sciences; Departments of Sociology and Anthropology, English, Political Science, Psychology, Studio Art, Pre-law Program, Women's and Gender Studies adn Avery Institute.


Documentary Film

"SAVING SANDY ISLAND"

FEB. 20, 2007

Presenters:  Trenholm Walker  and Dana Beach, Director of the Coastal Conservation League


Guest Speaker

Febrary 22, 2007

Presentation with Q & A: "Johns Island: Then and Now"

Presenter: Bill Saunders, Director and CEO of the Committee on Better Racial Assurance (COBRA)


Guest Speaker

Febrary 27, 2007

PowerPoint Presentation with Q & A: "Paradise Lost? The Story of Longleaf Pine"

Presenter: Dr. Jean Everett, Botanist, Dept. of Biology


Documentary Film

"Banking on Disaster: The Grave Consequences of Building a Road through the Heart of Amazonia"

March 15, 2007

Presenter: Dr. Marcela Rabi, Hispanic Studies


Guest Speaker

March 22, 2007

Presentation with Q & A: "An Anthropological Perspective on the Global Environmental Crisis"

Presenter: Prof. John Rashford, Anthropologist, Ethnobotanist, Department of Sociology/Anthropology


Guest Speaker

March 27, Tuesday, 6:00-8:00pm

"The Ecological Effects of the I-526 Extention onto Johns Island"

PowerPoint Presentation with Q & A: Professor Phil Dustan, Ecologist, Dept. of Biology


Workshop

March 24, 2007

"On The Way Home: Ecosteries and Natural Systems Thinking Process"

Presenter: Dan Shelton, Graduate Student in Integrated Ecology and Applied Eco-psychology, Institute of Global Education


Documentary Film

"Thirst"

April 5, 2007

Co-presenters: Professor Tim Callahan, Geology and Environmental Geosciences, and Brad Reed, President and CEO of Water Missions International


Golfing With Friends

April 19, 2007

Rivers Green

Campus and the community practiced their putts and got golf tips and competed to win passes to the Senior PGA Championship


Documentary Film

"John James Audubon: Drawn From Nature"

May 2, 2007

Charleston County Public Library

Southern Premiere of PBS American Masters Film, John James Audubon: Drawn from Nature and presentation by directory/producer Larry Hott

Co-sponsored with the Charleston County Friends of the Library

The film premierd nationally July 25, 2007 on PBS and is produced by Thirteen/WNET New York


Exhibit-"The Lowcountry: The Birthplace of American Golf – A Tour of Southern Golf History"

April 16 through the end of May

 

The Friends of the Library and the Special Collections Department at the College of Charleston will host an exhibit celebrating the history of golf both at the College and throughout the Southeast.  The exhibit, opening April 16th and running through the end of May, will feature rare, original works, including books, prints, photographs and paintings that will spotlight the history of the nation’s oldest sport.  Antique golf equipment and trophies will also be on display. 

Charlestonians began swinging their clubs at Harleston Green in 1786, where the first golf society in America was established.  Later, in1899 at North Charleston’s Chicora Park, the first nine-hole golf course in Charleston was designed.  By 1901, the club course had moved Belividere Plantation along the Cooper River, and in 1925 to James Island along the banks of the Wappoo River.  The Charleston Municipal Golf Course opened in 1929 in James Island.  The College of Charleston golf team took to the links in 1933.

This exhibit comes at a time when many golf enthusiasts will visit the Charleston area.  The Men’s Senior PGA Championship will take place at the Ocean Course at Kiawah, beginning May 22nd.  The 2012 PGA Championship will be played at the Ocean Course.  

The exhibit is free and open to the public


Guest Speaker

May 3, 2007

Conversation with Roger Warren, Past President of the PGA of America and President of the Kiawah Island Golf Resort spoke on the impact of golf on South Carolina Sponsored by the Friends of the Library


 

WINTHROP ROUNDTABLE

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

winthrop roundtable

Featured Speaker: Dr. Shashi Tharoor, United Nations Under Secretary General for Communications and Public Information.

Dr. Shashi Tharoor was the official candidate of India for the succession to UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan in 2006, and came a close second out of seven contenders in the race. He currently serves as the United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Communications and Public Information. His career began in 1978, when he joined the staff of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in Geneva, and includes key responsibilities in peace-keeping after the Cold War and as a senior adviser to the Secretary-General.

Dr. Tharoor is also the award-winning author of nine books, as well as hundreds of articles, op-eds and book reviews in a wide range of publications, including the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, the International Herald Tribune, Time, Newsweek and The Times of India. He has served for two years as a Contributing Editor and occasional columnist for Newsweek International. Since April 2001 he has authored a fortnightly column in The Hindu and since January 2007 in The Times of India.


Spoleto Sneak Preview: An Insider's Guide to the 2007 Spoleto USA and Piccolo Spoleto Festivals.

Monday, May 14, 7:00p.m.

CofC Music professors Edward Hart and Trevor Weston, and CofC theatre professor Todd McNerney will highlight the "must see" performances for this season and provide background and history for each event.

For more than ten years, Hart, Weston, and McNerney and other School of the Arts faculty have taught specialized Spoleto classes at the College of Charleston, introducing the arts to students in conjunction with the Festivals' performances. School of the Arts faculty, students and alumni perform in Festival concerts and productions every year.

spoleto


The Marlene and Nathan Addlestone Library is the official archive for Spoleto Festival USA. The archives include financial and organizational records since its inception in 1977, as well as many of the programs, audio and videotapes of actual performances.

*This event is co-sponsored by the CofC School of the Arts


LECTURE-Treasures and Curiosities of the Royal Library at Windsor Castle

Wednesday, May 23, 2007, 6:30 p.m

Oliver Everett, Librarian Emeritus of the Royal Library, Windsor Castle

Addlestone Library Room 227 (second floor), 205 Calhoun Street.

Windsor Castle library, full of fascinating objects associated with the history of Britain and the Royal Family, is primarily used by Queen Elizabeth to show her guests after dinner parties at the Castle. Join Oliver Everett as he takes us on a virtual tour of the library and its treasures including beautiful rare books and manuscripts, drawings and watercolors by Leonardo da Vinci, Raphael, Michelangelo and other masters, jewels, clocks, fans, and historical artifacts including the shirt in which Charles I was executed and the Queen’s description (when she was the 11 year old princess) of her father’s Coronation in 1937. Lecture is free and open to the public.

Cosponsoered by Friends of the Library and the Royal Socity of St. George.

The Royal Collection © 2006, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II RCIN 1142248


CONCERT - Friends of the Library and Charleston Music Fest

Friday, May 4, 2007, 7:30 pm

Ashley Hall, $25

Purchase tickets at www.etix.com or call 953.0935

Artists: Alexandre Brussilovsky and Volodymyr Vynnytsky

Pierné - Sonata opus 36

Franck - Sonata for violin and piano in A Major

Saent-Saens - Rondo Capriccioso in A minor, Op.2


Thursday, February 15, 6:00 p.m.

Poet C.D. Wright Speaks on the Craft of Writing Poetry


Addlestone Library, room 227

Award-winning poet C.D. Wright will speak "On the Craft of Writing Poetry" Thursday, February 15 at 6 p.m. in the Marlene and Nathan Addlestone Library, Room 227 on the College of Charleston campus. The talk, which will be informal in nature and will include opportunities for Ms. Wright to take questions from the audience and sign books, will focus on poetry as a craft and the problems and difficulties that arise for practicing writers during the writing process. Students and those who write are especially welcome to attend and bring questions. The event is sponsored by the Friends of the Library and the College of Charleston Visiting Writer's Series, and is free and open to the public.


Charleston Music Fest

October 20, 2006 through May 4, 2007

The Friends of the Library are co-sponsoring the inaugural season of the Charleston Music Fest, a year-round celebration of the finest classical and contemporary chamber music performed by world-class artists.

Visit the Charleston Music Fest Website at http://www.charlestonmusicfest.com for schedules and ticketing information.

Cosponsored with the College's School of the Arts, the series featured international performers Lee-Chin Siow, Natalia Khoma, Volodymyr Vynnytksy, Enrique Graf, Roland and Almita Vamos, Suren Bagratuni, Randolph Kelly and Alexandre Brussilovsky featuring works of Haydn, Brahms, Chopin, Ravel, Cassedo, Beethoven, Dvorak, Debussy and others,


January 22nd, 2008 | Book Talk: Chris Lamb | I’ll be Sober in the Morning: Great Political, Comebacks, Putdowns, and Ripostes

Marlene and Nathan Addlestone Library | Room 227 | 6:00pm

The ability to deliver a sharp comeback or putdown can be a potent political weapon. It can deflect or a criticism or leave an opponent speechless. Chris Lamb, who edited the recently published book, “I’ll be Sober in the Morning: Great Political, Comebacks, Putdowns, and Ripostes,” will discuss the role of humor on the campaign trail. Lamb is a professor of Communication at the College of Charleston.


January 23rd , 2008 | Book Talk: Linda Lear | Beatrix Potter: A Life in Nature |

Marlene and Nathan Addlestone Library | Room 227 | 6:00pm

Dr. Linda Lear Dr. Linda Lear's Beatrix Potter: A Life in Nature offers a new look at the extraordinary woman who gave us some of the most beloved children's books of all time. Beatrix Potter found freedom fromm her conventional Victorian upbringing during her family's trips to the countryside. Nature inspired her imagination as an artist and scientific illustrator, and The Tale of Peter Rabbit brought her fame, financial success and the promise of happiness. As a visionary land owner, successful farmer and sheep-breeder, Potter was able to preserve the Lake District Landscape that inspired her art.

Dr. Lear's talk will reveal a lively, independent woman whose art was timeless, and whose generosity left an indelible imprint on the countryside.

A natural history enthusiast and a collector of botanical art, Dr. Lear is currently a Research Professor of Environmental History at George Washington University and University Research Scholar in History at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. Following the talk, Dr. Lear will be available for book signings.


January 30th, 2008 | Charleston Music Fest: "Russian White Night"

College of Charleston | Randolph Hall | 7:30pm | Concert & Reception

Fee: $75.00

Performance featuring the Arensky Quartet and the Glazunov Cello Quintet.

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February 1st, 2008 | Charleston Music Fest: "Masterworks:

College of Charleston | Simons Arts Center Recital Hall, 54 St. Philip St. | 7:30pm

Fee: $25.00

Performance featuring the Couperin Duet, Prokofiev Violin Duos, Debussy Cello Sonata and Schumann Piano Quintet.


February 3rd, 2008 | Charleston Music Fest: "An Afternoon at Ashley Hall"

Ashley Hall | 172 Rutledge Avenue | 4pm

Fee: $25

Performance featuring Janacek Sonata for violin and piano, Bruch Romance for viola and piano, Op 85 and Brahms Piano Quartet in g minor.


February 4th, 2008 | African American Read-In, co-sponsored by the Caucus of the National Council of Teachers of English and the Friends of the Library

Marlene and Nathan Addlestone Library | Room 227 | 12-2pm

Join readers from across the nation as the College of Charleston celebrates the 19th annual National African American Read-In. Come hear College of Charleston students and faculty read short excerpts from some of their favorite African American authors. You're sure to hear favorite selections by classic writers and bound to discover new authors.


February 7th, 2008 | Dedication of African-American Monument

College of Charleston | Rivers Green (behind the Addlestone Library) | 4pm

African American Cemetery memorialStudents, faculty, staff and community members are invited to honor and commemorate the African-American cemeteries that once existed adjacent to the Marlene and Nathan Addlestone Library. The dedication ceremony will not only honor the hundreds of African-Americans who were once buried in the cemeteires, but it will also recognize the historic community that once existed adjacent to the College of Charleston.

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February 12th, 2008 | Lecture: “Darwin’s Place in the 21st Century” | Dr. Robert T. Dillon, Jr.

Addlestone Library, Room 227 | 7pm

The Addlestone Library has recently acquired a first edition of Charles Darwin's (1859) On the Origin of Species through the Friends of the Library. What makes this particular 150-year-old monograph valuable, when modern textbooks of evolutionary biology become obsolete and worthless every three years? Dr. Dillon will place Charles Darwin’s contributions within their scientific and cultural contexts.


February 18th, 2008 | American Film Premiere, The Curious Mister Catesby |

Screening: College of Charleston Sottile Theatre | 6:30pm

Champagne reception: Sottile Courtyard | 7:45pm

drawing of birdPart artist, part adventurer, part scientist, the Englishman Mark Catesby was a pioneering figure in the scientific exploration of the New World. His Natural History of Carolina, Florida & the Bahama Islands was the first fully illustrated study of North American flora and fauna, and was the first work by any English author to depict animals, particularly birds, in their native habitat.

Despite his profound influence, Catesby is largely unknown. His life and education are a mystery, his rare works are confined to a handful of privileged collections and his reputation is eclipsed by more popular artists such as John James Audubon, whose work more than a century later was profoundly influenced by Catesby.

The Curious Mister Catesby, a 52-minute documentary, will not only introduce its viewers to the extraordinary beauty of Catesby's paintings and the semi-tropical coastal wilderness in which he made his studies, but will also reveal how habitat destrution and depredation have caused the extinction of notable species immortalized in his pioneering work.

The Curious Mister Catesby features a historically accurate and meticulously crafted script, the voices of professional actors and leading authorities, original music based on Colonial themes, lush cinematography and state-of-the-art editing techniques. From beginning to end, the deep color values and saturations of the film match the breathtaking beauty of Catesby's paintings.

The Special Collections at the College of Charleston's Addlestone Library boasts an impressive collection of natural history rare books and folios, including the 1771 edition of Catesby's Natual History. Both volumes will e on display at the screening.

A contribution of $100 to benefit the Friends of the Library at the College of Charleston and the Catesby Commemorative Trust is encouraged. For more information please call (843) 953-5530.

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February 19th, 2008 | "Pros and Cons: Are Athletes Role Models?"

College of Charleston | Sottile Theatre | 7pm

Featuring Frank Deford

Frank DefordProfessional athletes are not like the rest of us. Or, are they? Revered and reviled, today's superstar is fully exposed to the public eye. Some are wildly generous philanthropists with the utmost integrity, while others are ego-maniacs, steroid abusers, dog fighters, and even convicted felons.

On February 19, Friends of the Library at the College of Charleston will address this topic head-on with a panel discussion entitles "Pros and Cons: Are Athletes Role Models?" Featuring legendary sports journalist Frank Deford as moderator, guest panelists will include College of Charleston basketball coach Bobby Cremins, Citadel Athletics Director Les Robinson, Olympic Gold medalist and WBA superstar Katrina McClain, and surprise guests.

Author and commentator Frank Deford is among the most versatile of American writers. His work has appeared in virtually every medium. The author of fifteen books, his newest, The Entitled, a novel about celebrity, sex and baseball, was published in 2007.

On radio, Deford may be heard as a commentator every Wednesday on "Morning Edition" on National Public Radio. On television, he is a regular correspondent on the HBO show, RealSports with Bryant Gumbel. In magazines, he is senior contributing writer at Sports Illustrated.

Moreover, two of Defords books-the novel, Everybody's All American, and Alex: The Life of a Child, his memoir about his daughter who died of cystic fibrosis - have been made into movies. His book, Casey on the Loose, is being turned into a Broadway musical. Cathy Schulman, producer of 2005's Academy Award-winning best picture, Crash, is producing Deford's next film, a comedy, The Sister-in-Law.

As a journalist, Deford has been elected to the Hall of Fame of the National Association of Sportscasters and Sportswriters. Deford has been voted by his peers six times as US Sportswriter of the Year. The American Journalism Review has likewise cited him as the nation's finest sportswriter, and twice he was voted Magazine Writer of the Year by the Washington Journalism Review.

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February 24th, 2008 | Installation of Sam and Regina Greene Plaque

Addlestone Library | Following talk by Linda Gradstein | Co-Sponsored by Jewish Studies Center

More details TBA


March 6th, 2008 | Winthrop Roundtable featuring Darla Moore

Addlestone Library | 6:30pm

Darla MooreDarla Moore, Vice President of Rainwater Inc., is founder and chair of the Palmetto Institute, a nonprofit think tank aimed at bolstering per capita income in South Carolina. She serves on the boards of the University of South Carolina and New York University Medical School and Hospital. The University of South Carolina's Business School is named in her honor and she is the first woman to be profiled on the cover of Fortune Magazine and named to the List of the Top 50 Most Powerful Women in American Business. She has served on numerous corporate boards, including Hospital Corp. of America (HCA) and Martha Stuart Living Omnimedia. She currently serves on the board of The South Financial Group, MPS Group and the National Advisory Board of JP Morgan and was formerly a managing director of the predecessor Chemical Bank. She recently received the Business Person of the Year Award from the South Carolina Chamber of Commerce and was inducted into the South Carolina Business Hall of Fame. A graduate of the University of South Carolina, More holds an M.B.A from George Washington University.

Paid event - please call 843.953.5530


March 13th, 2008 | Charleston Music Fest: "Romance"

Ashley Hall | 172 Rutledge Avenue | 7:30pm

Fee: $25.00

Performance featuring Almita Vamos, Leonardo Altino, Monique Duphill

  • Schubert Sonatina No. 3 in G minor fro violin and piano
  • Faure Nocturne No. 2 in B Major for solo piano
  • Chopin Polonaise, Op 3 for cello and piano
  • Dvorak Piano Trio in e minor, Op 90 (Dumky)

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March 19th, 2008 | Book Talk: Thomas Cathcart and Daniel Klein | Plato and Platypus Walk Into a Bar...Understanding Philosophy Through Jokes

Addlestone Library | Room 227

Tom Cathcart and Dan Klein, authors of Plato and Platypus Walk Into a Bar...Understanding Philosophy Through Jokes and the recent Aristotle and an Aardvark Go to Washington: Understanding Political Doublespeak through Philosophy and Jokes, will takle the humorous topic: "How to Eventually Make A Decent Living Despite an Imprudent Choice of Major."

Tom Cathcart has had what may caritably called a "multifaceted" career: street gang worker in Chicago, teacher at Westbrook (Maine) Jr. College, executive at Blue Cross and Blue Shield, hospital C.O.O., administrator of an HIV/AIDS hospice, and program director for a mental health agency. He is wicked tall and reports that he enjoys a national reputaion as a "chick magnet."

Like Tom, Dan Klein is a graduate of Harvard in philosophy, co-wrote "Plato and a Platypus...", "Aristotle and an Aardvark...", and "Macho Meditations," and is bald. Unlike Tom, dan has never done an honest day's work in his life, having earned his keep as a TV writer (Candid Camera, quiz shows, special material for comedians Flip Wilson and David Frye) and as a writer of genre fiction (the medical thrillers 'Embryo', 'Wavelengths', and 'Beauty Sleep', and t he Elvis Presley mysteries, 'Kill Me Tender', 'Blue Suede Clues', etc. Also, unlike Tom, Dan is short and cute.

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April 6th, 2008 | Climate Change Exhibit, presented in conjunction with Clemson Architecture Center

Addlestone Library Rotunda

"Global Climate Change and the Charleston Peninsula" is a study of the potential impacts on urban design of sea level rise and increasingly sever storm events over the next 200 years. Studied in four orders of magnitude, this overview envisions phased strategies the City should consider in dealing with climate change.


April 18th, 2008 | "Political Dynasties on the Public Stage" - William H.T. Bush Lecture

Avery Research Center | 3rd | 6:00 pm

William H.T. “Bucky” Bush is the younger brother of former President George H.W. Bush and the uncle of current President George W. Bush. His lecture, “Political Dynasties on the Public Stage”, will focus on the development of political families and their relationship with the media.

Continuing the family legacy, Bush graduated from Yale University in 1960. He has held positions in several banks and venture capital firms and is now the CEO and founder of Bush O’Donnell & Co., a financial services holding company. He currently lives in St. Louis, Missouri where he served on the Board of Trustees of St. Louis University and was the president of the Municipal Opera Associate (The MUNY). Following another family tradition, Bush currently lives in the home of his grandfather, George Herbert Walker.

The Bush family boasts three generations of politicians including a U.S. Senator, two Governors, one Vice President and two Presidents. With the public’s high expectations and watchful eye, political dynasties must constantly be aware of their actions. Bush also worked on the election campaigns of George, George H.W., and Jeb Bush, primarily as a fundraiser.


April 26th, 2008 | Charleston Music Fest: "Masterworks"

College of Charleston | Simons Art Center Recital Hall | 54 St. Philip Street | 7:30pm

Fee: $25.00

Performance featuring Lee Chin Siow, Natalia Khoma, Kathryn Dey, Volodymyr Vynnytsky

  • Beethoven Piano Trio, Op1, no 1
  • Schumann Piano Quartet


April 27th, 2008 | Charleston Music Fest: "Concert and High Tea at Ashley Hall"

Ashley Hall | 172 Rutledge Avenue | 4:00pm

Fee: $25.00

Performance featuring Lee Chin Siow, Natalia Khoma, Jill Muti, Volodymyr Vynnytsky

  • Bach Trio Sonata in G major BWV 1038
  • Schumann Fantasiestuck
  • Monti Czardas
  • Chopin Scherzo, No 1 in b minor
  • Tschaikovsky Trio "Seasons"

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May-June 2008 | Richard McMahan Exhibit

Addlestone Library Rotunda

For the past ten years, Richard McMahan has been creating his own personal museum collection featuring miniatures he feels tell the story of art history of our world. The Florida resident, who considers himself an art historian as well as an artist, has an exceptional talent for producing tiny images representing art in both public collections here and abroad. McMahan began his collection working from photographs he found in over one hundred years of National Geographic Magazine


May 12th, 2008 | Lecture: Spoleto Sneak Preview

Simons Center Recital Hall | 6pm

This annual event, co-sponsored by the Friends of the School of the Arts, features SOTA professors and is a guide to the must-see performances for the Spoleto and Piccolo Spoleto Festivals.

 
visit us at the Addlestone Library, College of Charleston, 205 Calhoun Street, Charleston, South Carolina