4 Thursday
10 Wednesday
17 Wednesday
21 Sunday
25 Thursday
12:30 p.m. A docent leads a
40-minute tour in the permanent
12:30 p.m. Helen Lee: Gallery talk
on her work in the Art Department
2 p.m. A docent leads a
40-minute tour, docent's choice.
collection.
Faculty Quadrennial Exhibition 2016.
12:30 p.m. Derrick Buisch:
Gallery talk on his work in the Art
Department Faculty Quadrennial
12:30 p.m. A docent leads a
40-minute tour in the permanent
collection.
7 Sunday
11 Thursday
12:30 p.m. Sunday Afternoon Live
at the Chazen with Wisconsin
Brass Quintet.
12:30 p.m. A docent l eads a
40-minute tour in the permanent
collection.
2 p.m. A docent leads a 40-minute
tour, docent's choice.
12:30 p.m. Tom Loeser: Gallery talk
on his work in the Art Department
Faculty Quadrennial Exhibition 2016.
2 p.m. Sunday Cinematheque:
Bergman, The Seventh Seal
(Det sjunde inseglet), Sweden,
1957, 35mm, 97 min., Swedish
with English subtitles, directed by
Ingmar Bergman, cast: Max von
Sydow, Gunnar Björnstrand, Bibi
Andersson. A knight (von Sydow)
and his squire return from the
Crusades to their plague-ravaged
and spiritually lost homeland. Their
aim is to fend off the black spectre
of Death by challenging him to
a game of chess. The first of an
intense series of Bergman films
that grapples with the doubts and
contradictions of religious belief
suggests that God is silent and death
is implacable. Nearly sixty years
after its first release, it remains a
cinematic masterpiece for all time.
9 Tuesday
12:30 p.m. Gerit Grimm: Gallery talk
on her work in the Art Department
Faculty Quadrennial Exhibition 2016.
5:30 p.m. Matthew Bakkom:
Gallery talk on his work in the Art
Department Faculty Quadrennial
Exhibition 2016.
14 Sunday
2 p.m. A docent leads a 40-minute
tour, docent's choice.
2 p.m. Sunday Cinematheque:
Bergman, Summer with Monika
(Sommaren med Monika),
Sweden, 1953, 35mm, 97 min.,
Swedish with English subtitles,
directed by Ingmar Bergman, cast:
Harriet Andersson, Lars Ekborg,
Dagmar Ebbesen. In this sexually
frank and erotically charged drama,
the earthy, teenaged Monika
(Andersson) runs away with her
young working-class lover for a
summer idyll at the beach. Then,
reality sets in. For many Bergman
admirers, Summer with Monika
is one of the director’s first fully
realized projects, and perhaps his
first masterpiece.
Exhibition 2016.
18 Thursday
12:30 p.m. A docent leads a
40-minute tour in the permanent
collection.
5:30 p.m. Jeffrey Clancy:
Gallery talk on his work in the Art
Department Faculty Quadrennial
Exhibition 2016.
19 Friday
Beyond Likeness: Mapping the
Self opens to the public in the
Oscar F. and Louise Greiner Mayer
Gallery. Drawn from the Museum's
permanent collection, the exhibition
was conceived and executed by
students from Prof. Barbara C.
Buenger’s Art History 602, Curatorial
Studies class, in collaboration with
Chazen staff.
2 p.m. Sunday Cinematheque:
Bergman, Port Of Call
(Hamnstad), Sweden, 1948,
35mm, 97 min., Swedish with
English subtitles, directed by
Ingmar Bergman, cast: NineChristine Jönsson, Bengt Eklund,
Mimi Nelson. Berit (Jönsson),
a suicidal young woman living
in a working-class port town,
unexpectedly falls for a sailor on
leave. Held back by a troubled
past and a domineering mother,
Berit begins to hope that her
new relationship might save
her from self-destruction. Made
by Bergman in the style of
Roberto Rossellini and Italian
neorealism, Port of Call shows
the director succeeding in an
early, experimental phase.
23 Tuesday
12:30 p.m. Fred Stonehouse:
Gallery talk on his work in the Art
Department Faculty Quadrennial
Exhibition 2016.
24 Wednesday
12:30 p.m. Lisa Gralnick: Gallery
talk on her work in the Art
Department Faculty Quadrennial
Exhibition 2016.
12:30 p.m. Leslee Nelson:
Gallery talk on her work in the Art
Department Faculty Quadrennial
Exhibition 2016. See the related
workshop on March 10.
5:30 p.m. Meg Mitchell: Gallery talk
on her work in the Art Department
Faculty Quadrennial Exhibition 2016.
28 Sunday
2 p.m. A docent leads a 40-minute
tour, docent's choice.
2 p.m. Sunday Cinematheque:
Bergman, Through A Glass Darkly
(Såsom i en spegel), Sweden,
1961, 35mm, 89 min., Swedish with
English subtitles, directed by Ingmar
Bergman, cast: Harriet Andersson,
Max von Sydow, Gunnar Björnstrand.
On a remote island off the coast
of Sweden, a young woman
(Andersson) sinks into schizophrenia
as her sexually confused brother,
emotionally remote father, and
ineffectual husband grapple with
their own demons. Bergman,
who won his second Oscar for
this harrowing drama, displays
remarkable aesthetic control along
with his celebrated ability to mold
stunning performances.