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Thursday, June 26
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 | 11 AM-5:30 PM
42nd Smithsonian Folklife Festival
Annual Event |
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The Smithsonian's annual Folklife Festival brings together hundreds of performers, artists, storytellers, craftspeople, cooks, and workers to explain, demonstrate, and celebrate their cultural traditions. This year's themes include: Bhutan: Land of the Thunder Dragon: Situated in the eastern Himalayas and bordered by China and India, Bhutan is an agrarian society where approximately 95% of its people practice traditional farming. To celebrate their special approach to life in the 21st century, more than 100 Bhutanese artists, dancers, craftspeople, cooks, carpenters, farmers, weavers, and representatives of monastic life demonstrate their living traditions that define and sustain their culture. NASA: Fifty Years and Beyond: To showcase the role NASA has played in broadening the horizons of American science and culture, a cross-section of its 18,000 employees and 40,000 contractors -- astronomers, astronauts, astrophysicists, educators, and engineers -- provide living presentations; hands-on educational activities; demonstrations of skills, techniques, and knowledge; narrative "oral history" sessions; and exhibits that explore the agency's spirit of innovation, discovery, and service. Texas: A Celebration of Music, Food, and Wine: The Lone Star State shares its proud history and contemporary traditions through its music, dance, and food. Hear presentations of Texas blues, swing, country and western, gospel, and tejano music; see demonstrations of wine making; and enjoy diverse culinary traditions from barbeque to Vietnamese specialties. Sponsored by the Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage Program.
Free
Repeats June 27-29 & July 2-6
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Special Smithsonian Sponsored
Location: National Mall near Smithsonian Museums
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 | 12 Noon & 1:30 PM
Repetition and The Battle of Orgreave
The Cinema Effect: Part II Special Screenings |
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Note: Programs are unrated but may contain adult content.
12 Noon: Artur Zmijewski's Repetition (2005, 75 min.) re-creates the infamous 1971 Stanford Prison Experiment, but achieves a different result. Rather than accepting their roles and engaging in confrontational behavior, as in the original experiment, the modern-day "guards" and "prisoners," aware of the power of the camera to survey and control, ultimately unite against the producers to end the experiment. 1:30 PM: Jeremy Deller's The Battle of Orgreave (2001, 63 min.) is a re-enactment of the 1984 confrontation between striking miners and police near the Orgreave coking plant in England. The event provided an opportunity for several members of the parties participating in the original strike -- including miners and their families, policemen, the townspeople of Orgreave, the British media, and the viewing public -- to re-evaluate the chronology of the conflict and the way in which the televised images of the strike colored public opinion.
Free; first come, first served
Repeats Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays through Sept. 6
Related Exhibition: The Cinema Effect: Part II - Realisms
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Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden
Location: Ring Auditorium
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 | 12:30-12:45 PM ***New Date***
Lost: Survival Gear for an Emergency that Never Happened
Ask an Expert |
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Allan Needell, Space History Division, discusses survival gear for an emergency that never happened.
Free
Continues 2nd & 4th Thursdays of each month
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National Air and Space Museum Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center
Location: Meet at the SR-71 Blackbird
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 | 1:30 PM
Art + Coffee
Luce Foundation Center Activity |
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Discover the treasures of the Luce Foundation Center for American Art during a tour or talk. Afterwards, enjoy a complimentary coffee or tea.
Free
Repeats Wednesday through Sunday
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Smithsonian American Art Museum
Location: Meet in the F Street Lobby
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 | 2 PM
Travelers and Magicians
Bhutan Film Series |
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(2003, 108 min., Dzongkha with English subtitles, directed by Khyentse Norbu) In celebration of the Folklife Festival's focus on the Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan, the Freer Gallery of Art presents this cinematic fable by Khyentse Norbu, Bhutan's most famous director and one of Himalayan Buddhism's most revered lamas. The film's star Tshewang Dendup and celebrated musician Sonam Dorji answer questions after the screening.
Free, but tickets (2 per person) distributed 1 hour before
Repeats July 2
See related 2008 Smithsonian Folklife Festival programs
Related Exhibition: Arts of the Indian Subcontinent and the Himalayas
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Arthur M. Sackler Gallery and Freer Gallery of Art
Location: Freer, Meyer Auditorium
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 | 6 PM
Brakhage & Viola
Film Series |
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Note: This film is unrated. Material may not be suited for all audiences. This program features the following film by Bill Viola, a recognized master of his medium. His innovative use of material, technique, and technology to create highly personal and spiritual art has brought him international acclaim.
The Passing (1991, 54 min.) examines the intricacies of the mind's conscious and subconscious and weaves together elements of dreams and everyday life. Viola places himself at the very center of this highly personal exploration, which alters time and space so that the artist can present his vision of birth, life, and death.
Free, first come, first served
Series continues in July
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Smithsonian American Art Museum
Location: McEvoy Auditorium (enter from G St.)
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 | 6-6:30 PM
Portrait of Agnes Meyer by Edward Steichen
"Face to Face" Portrait Talk |
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The weekly portrait talk highlights a portrait selected by a National Portrait Gallery staff member or guest speaker. Behind-the-scenes volunteer Elizabeth Hylton talks about the portrait of Agnes Meyer by Edward Steichen.
Free
Continues most Thursday evenings
Related Exhibition: Edward Steichen: Portraits
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National Portrait Gallery
Location: Meet at F Street Lobby
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 | 6:30-8:30 PM
The Anniversary by Ham Tran
The Vietnamese American Experience on Film |
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The Anniversary (2004, 28 min.) This film by award-winning filmmaker Ham Tran is about two brothers separated by the Vietnam War. It is Tran's first film and his UCLA graduate school thesis project. After the screening, he is joined by professor Linda Trihn Vo (chair, Asian American Studies School, University of California, Irvine) and Dr. Bich Nguyen (linguistics expert) to discuss the Vietnamese American experience on film, past, present, and future. Sponsored by the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Program.
Free; first come, first served
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Special Smithsonian Sponsored
Location: S. Dillon Ripley Center, Lecture Hall
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 | 6:30-8 PM
Sunset Serenades: The Orioles
Performance |
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Bring a blanket and a picnic -- or purchase food and beverages at the Zoo -- and enjoy live oldies music by The Orioles.
Free
Series continues every Thursday through August 7
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National Zoo
Location: Lion/Tiger Hill (rain or shine)
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 | 7 PM
Candice Breitz
Meet the Artist Lecture Series |
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In her piece Mother + Father (2005), on view in the related exhibition, Candice Breitz extracts dialogue from Hollywood films, isolating the stereotypes of mothers and fathers. The artist talks about her pointed and skillfully edited video installations and the compelling questions they post about the relationship between life and media.
Free; first come, first served
Related Exhibition: The Cinema Effect: Part II - Realisms
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Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden
Location: Ring Auditorium
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 | 7:30 PM
Up at the Lab
Performance |
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Writer Gary Leon Hill, Catherine Castellanos, Frances Lee McCain, Luis Saguar, and director David Dower read from and discuss the script-in-progress of their play Up at the Lab, which weaves the oral histories of blue collar workers at New Mexico's Los Alamos Laboratory with those of the Pueblo communities surrounding the lab. The play addresses the history of the lab, its impact on the immediate region, and its continuing impact on the planet, all through first-person narratives of the people who lived and worked nearby.
Free
Repeats June 28 at 2 PM
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National Museum of the American Indian
Location: 1st Level, Rasmuson Theater (enter from Maryland Ave.)
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Last update: July 1, 2008, 08:44 |