Mar
16
Thu
History & Hops with Bill Madden @ Heurich House
Mar 16 @ 6:30 PM – 8:30 PM

Bill Madden will be the inaugural host of a revamped History & Hops series at the Heurich House Museum. On Thursday, March 16, 2017 from 6:30-8:30 pm, the Mad Fox Brewing Company CEO and Executive Brewer will host the Dupont Circle Museum’s monthly beer-themed after-house event, but now with a new twist. Madden kicks off a year of “beer star” hosts that will include industry insiders from throughout the area. During March’s intimate evening, guests will have more personal access to Bill to discuss a variety of beers he has hand-selected. Guests will have the unique opportunity to enhance their local beer knowledge by learning from an expert, while also being able to self-tour the historic Brewmaster’s Castle.

A nationally recognized brewmaster, Bill Madden has operated seven brewpub locations in Northern Virginia, the District of Columbia, and Maryland. He has also won numerous medals at the Great American Beer Festival® and the Chicago Real Ale Festival. His achievements in the brewing industry speak to his finesse and skill as a brewer. Now it is your chance to learn from this beer insider!

“Even though History & Hops continues to be one of our most popular public events, we wanted to give our guests an even richer experience,” said Heurich House Museum Executive Director Kimberly Bender. “We are excited to introduce them to the best beer minds in DC in an intimate and interactive setting. Christian Heurich would be proud that his home is being used to educate people about his craft.”

Tickets for History & Hops hosted by Bill Madden are $30 per person and include tastings, snacks and self-guided tours of the Heurich House Museum. For more information and to purchase tickets, please visit http://bit.ly/HHMar2017. Guests must be 21 or older. All proceeds benefit the preservation and growth of the Heurich House Museum.

 

Story Time Gala @ Great Hall of the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library
Mar 16 @ 6:30 PM – 10:30 PM

The DC Public Library Foundation (DCPLF) will host the second annual “Story Time” Gala Reception on Thursday, March 16 at 6:30pm. The celebration, which benefits the DC Public Library’s early childhood literacy programs, will take place in the Great Hall of the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library. The theme of this year’s event is “A Book is a Dream” and, appropriately enough, the Great Hall of the library will be transformed into a wondrous dreamscape. The evening will be the last large event held in the MLK branch of the library, as it will close soon thereafter for a 3-year modernization project. Tickets, which start at $150, are available here.

The evening will feature some of the District’s most exciting chefs and bartenders, brought together by Derek Brown, DCPLF Board member and co-owner of several acclaimed District bars.  Erik Bruner-Yang (Maketto), Johnny Spero (Columbia Room), Evan Scarlatelli (Eat the Rich) and Scott Drewno (The Source) will create inspired food for the event. Cocktails will be crafted exclusively for the evening by JP Fetherston (Columbia Room), Paul Taylor (Southern Efficiency) and Duane Sylvestre, (Collectif 1806).

“Books are the gateway to understanding the world we live in and enchanting places both imaginary and real,” said Bonnie Cohen, President of the DC Public Library Foundation. “We look forward to hosting yet another ‘Story Time Gala’ full of delight and magic.”

“I’m honored to be a part of an event that is bringing so many talented people together in support of such a worthy cause,” shares Derek Brown. “Many of our chefs and bartenders and their families use our D.C. public libraries every day. They want to give back to help other families across the city.”

In addition to the food and cocktails, there will be short performances and live music at the gala.

Proceeds from the “Story Time” Gala Reception will support the DC Public Library Foundation and the Library’s critical children’s programs that serve more than 25,000 children a month in every Ward throughout the District.

“Our programs are critical to families throughout Washington, D.C.,” said Richard Reyes-Gavilan, Executive Director of the DC Public Library. “The DC Public Library Foundation supports a myriad of library programs, from story times at all of our neighborhood libraries, to our Sing, Talk & Read (STAR) early literacy training, author talks and more.”

Individual tickets for the “Story Time” Gala Reception are $150. The event has already attracted corporate support , including lead sponsors Smoot/Gilbane and Pepco Holdings, Inc., and sponsors EastBanc/JBG/Clark, Blue Skye Construction Group, Graham Holdings, SAXON Collaborative, Quadrangle Development Corp, Reset Public Affairs  and others. Sponsorships are available for $5,000 and $10,000. An array of individual Washingtonians have also signed on to host the event ($2,000), including former Mayor Anthony Williams, DC Public Library former and present Trustees, DC Public Library Foundation board members, and others.

For more information and a full list of performers, hosts and sponsors please visit the DCPLF webpage.

PRESENTING SPONSORS:

Pepco Holdings Inc.

Smoot/Gilbane

SPONSORS:

Bill & Sunny Alsup

Blue Skye Construction Group

Bonnie & Lou Cohen

EastBanc/JBG/Clark

Graham Holdings

Susan Haight

Quadrangle Development Corp.

Reset Public Affairs

Saxon Collaborative

HOSTS:

Anonymous

Arent Fox

Jenny Backus & Ed Pagano

Brookfield Properties

Derek Brown

Eli & Virginia Grace Cohen

Sara Cormeny & Pete Miller

EHT Traceries

Federation of Friends of DCPL

Erin Harkless & Charles Moore

Gail & John Harmon

Austen and Chloe Holderness

The JBG Companies

Haley Kaufman & Jeff Alpher

Barbara Krumsiek

Amanda Leiter & Sambhav Sankar

James W. Lewis

Irma & Dan Maldonado

Martinez + Johnson

Mecanoo

The Ritzy Ladies Book Club

Marquett Smith

Uber

Widmeyer Communications, a Finn Partners Company

William C. Smith and Company

Mar
19
Sun
20th Anniversary Millennium Stage Kennedy Center @ Kennedy Center Millenium Stage
Mar 19 @ 5:00 PM – 8:00 PM

The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts announces a free celebration of the 20th anniversary of Millennium Stage to thank the audiences, artists, donors, staff, ushers, fellows, and more who have made this one-of-a-kind venture a continued, resounding success. The March 19event, utilizing both the north and south stages, will feature performances by Celtic rock band Scythian and New Orleans funk band Big Sam’s Funky Nation in a massive party overtaking the Center’s Grand Foyer.

Founded in 1997 by former Kennedy Center Board Chair James A. Johnson, the Millennium Stage remains the only venue in the world to offer a free performance every day of the year that is also streamed live on the web, fulfilling the Center’s mission of making the performing arts available to everyone. It has proven to be a perfect representation of the diverse and multifaceted performing arts offered by the Kennedy Center, with such past performers as Gladys Knight, Christoph Eschenbach, Aaron Goldman, Manzari Brothers, Norah Jones, Aretha Franklin, India.Arie, Circo Para Todos, Phil Wiggins, Smokey Robinson, and Kailash Kher & Kailasa.

In the past two decades, more than three million audience members from the D.C. area, across the U.S., and around the world have attended a Millennium Stage performance, with countless others experiencing these shows via the live stream. This special event is part of JFKC: A Centennial Celebration of John F. Kennedy, the Kennedy Center’s yearlong programming initiative marking the 100th anniversary of John F. Kennedy’s birth and legacy, inspired by five ideals frequently attributed to America’s 35th President:Courage, Freedom, Justice, Service, and Gratitude. JFKC programming continues through the end of 2017.

“All of us at the Kennedy Center are incredibly grateful to our audiences for their enthusiastic support of Millennium Stage. In the past two decades more than 7,000 artists from across the globe have been presented, representing a diverse breadth of genres from established artistic traditions to the latest frontiers of performance,” said Deborah F. Rutter, President of the Kennedy Center. “Jim Johnson had a vision for what accessibility to the arts might look like. What resulted in our beloved Millennium Stage 20 years ago was brilliant and ahead of its time.”

The night will kick-off at 5:00 p.m. with a happy hour in the Grand Foyer, featuring half price beer and house wine. The first 1,000 guests at the happy hour will receive a special commemorative Millennium Stage 20th Anniversary t-shirt. Performances begin at 6:00 p.m. with Scythian, a band that plays roots music from Celtic, Eastern European, and Appalachian traditions with a thunderous energy that beckons crowds into a barn-dance, rock concert experience. Immediately following, at 7:00 p.m., the party will continue with Big Sam’s Funky Nation, a group of world-class musicians that are a driving force of urban funk, melding funk, rock & roll, Hip Hop, and jazz, gluing everything together with a brassy influence. For more information, visit tkc.co/mstage.

Mar
23
Thu
Library of Congress Disco Symposium @ Library of Congress
Mar 23 @ 1:00 PM – 6:00 PM
Library of Congress logo

NEWS from the LIBRARY of CONGRESS
March 23, 2017

Press contact:  Bryonna Head, Office of Communications (202) 707-3073, bhea@loc.gov
Public contact: Concert Line (202) 707-5502
Website: Registration for downloadable images in online press kit
Request ADA accommodations five business days in advance at (202) 707-6362 or ada@loc.gov.   

 

Library to Host Series of Disco Events

Line-up includes Gloria Gaynor, Tim Gunn

The Library of Congress is presenting a series of disco-themed events to celebrate and memorialize the era of the mid-1970s and early 1980s that changed American art, fashion, language and sound. “Bibliodiscotheque” will include two months of programs such as film screenings, lectures and a symposium followed by a disco party featuring Gloria Gaynor.

“The disco era has left a lasting mark on our culture,” said Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden. “The music, the clothes, those fantastic disco balls – they are a part of Americana that new generations are still discovering and embracing. I am so thrilled to announce these events and the incredible line-up of guests we will have at the Library in the coming months as we celebrate the era of disco and share related items from the Library’s collections.”

Nearly 40 years have passed since the heyday of platform shoes and dazzling disco balls, but disco is recognized as a phenomenon that redefined cultural norms across the United States. “Lest anyone think that disco was an aberrant moment in the ’70’s. Disco culture is inextricable from the history of 20th century fashion,” said Emmy award-winning fashion icon, Tim Gunn. “Its representation in the Library of Congress not only legitimizes the genre, but fully validates it.”

 The Library of Congress holds significant collection materials in various formats that showcase the American disco experience. These items will be on display for the duration of this series. Programming includes screenings of disco-influenced films as well as lectures and panel discussions presented by cultural experts, such as author, producer and fashion icon Tim Gunn, who will present a lecture on the influence of disco fashion followed by a book signing.  The series will conclude with a symposium featuring the disco singing sensation Gloria Gaynor, followed by an evening extravaganza with a live performance.

Gaynor will discuss and sign her new book, “We Will Survive: True Stories of Encouragement, Inspiration, and the Power of Song.” The book’s title harkens back to her 1978 classic “I Will Survive” which was selected for preservation in 2016 for the National Recording Registry. In “We Will Survive,” Gaynor shares 40 inspirational, true stories about survivors of all kinds — individuals who have found comfort, hope, and courage through the power of that song.

“I am thrilled that the Library of Congress has found my role in American music worthy to be commemorated by the inclusion of my recording of “I Will Survive” in the National Recording Registry,” said Gaynor. “I look forward with great anticipation to my concert at the Library of Congress “Bibliodiscotheque.”

Events are free and open to the public. Free tickets are required for admission to all activities. Tickets will be available beginning at 10:00 a.m. on March 30at this website. A limited number of press credentials will also be available for reservation. The deadline to reserve credentials for lectures, the symposium, and the dance party is Friday, April 28. Some of the events will be live-streamed on the Library’s Facebook page at facebook.com/libraryofcongress and its YouTube channel at youtube.com/LibraryOfCongress. All programs will take place at the Library’s Thomas Jefferson Building, 10 First St. S.E., or at its James Madison Memorial Building, 101 Independence Ave. S.E., both in Washington, D.C.

The excitement can be followed on Twitter at @librarycongress and #LCDisco.

 

The Library’s programming will include: 

Symposium*

 

Saturday, May 6
1 p.m. (Coolidge Auditorium)
Library of Congress “Bibliodiscotheque” Symposium
Explore the history of disco music, dance and culture in this afternoon symposium that features appearances by Gloria Gaynor, Good Morning America host Robin Roberts, distinguished music scholars Martin Scherzinger and Alice Echols, photographer Bill Bernstein, and Yolanda Baker, the only disco ball maker in the United States. A book-signing will follow.

Presented in association with the Library of Congress Music and Prints & Photographs Divisions, and Veterans History Project, with additional support from The Recording Academy.

 

1 p.m. “The Craft of Making Disco Balls”
Yolanda Baker, Disco Ball Maker, Omega National Products
Toni Lehring, Omega National Products

 

1:30 p.m. “Two Perspectives on Beyoncé’s African Dance References”
Martin Scherzinger, Associate Professor of Media, Culture, and Communication, New York University

 

2 p.m. “Disco: The Bill Bernstein Photographs”
Bill Bernstein, Photographer

 

2:30 p.m. “Hot Stuff: Disco and the Remaking of American Culture”
Alice Echols, Barbra Streisand Professor of Contemporary Gender Studies and Professor of History and Gender Studies, University of Southern California

 

3 p.m. Panel Discussion
Bill Bernstein, Alice Echols, Martin Scherzinger

 

4 p.m. “Gloria Gaynor on “I Will Survive”
Gloria Gaynor, Vocalist
Robin Roberts, Good Morning America, Interviewer
Keynote interview with Gloria Gaynor, member of The Recording Academy New York Chapter Board of Governors and author of “We Will Survive,” a book of 40 individual “true stories of encouragement, inspiration, and the power of song.”

 

5 p.m. (Whittall Pavilion)
Book-Signing: Gloria Gaynor, Robin Roberts, Bill Bernstein and Alice Echols
Books will be available for purchase at the Library of Congress Gift Shop (Ground Floor, Thomas Jefferson Building) beginning at 9 a.m. on Saturday, May 6.

Free, tickets available, visit www.loc.gov/concerts/disco for more information.
*This event will be live streamed.

Mar
24
Fri
Park Hyatt Masters of Food & Wine: Great American Craftsmanship @ Thos. Moser
Mar 24 @ 6:30 PM – 9:00 PM

Park Hyatt Washington D.C. will host a Spring 2017 Park Hyatt Masters of Food & Wine: Great American Craftsmanship, a seasonal culinary & beverage experience on Friday, March 24. This culinary gathering salutes the ingredients, flavors, and talents of local chefs, and the artistry of American designer Thos. Moser.  Guests will join newly appointed Executive Chef Troy Knapp and Blue Duck Tavern Chef de Cuisine Brad Deboy for an evening of carefully sourced, and artfully prepared culinary delights paired to match the craftsmanship of Thos. Moser’s renowned handmade American furniture (https://www.thosmoser.com).  The evening will begin in the Thos. Moser showroom with welcome cocktails, inspired by woods used to create original Thos. Moser’s original designs, paired with house-made charcuterie.  Next, the group will continue to the living room for appetizers and wine, followed by a seated chef’s table dinner where one will have the opportunity to talk with Chef Knapp and the Thos. Moser team about each of the dishes they’ve sampled, designs they’ve seen, and the connection between these two great arts. As a very unique feature to the event, a Thos. Moser craftsman from Maine will be handcrafting and assembling a piece of furniture in the showroom. This will mirror the creation of dishes and drinks from the Park Hyatt Washington in the same space.  Guests will conclude the evening with wine and cheese, and desserts presented on a handcrafted Thos. Moser bookshelf. This final sweet ending will be the artful work of Pastry Chef Erin Reed. This event is priced at $150 per person (all-inclusive). Each course will have wine selected by Chef Knapp, a trained sommelier, and will include wine pairings from Boekenhoutskloff Winery, located in Franschhoek Valley, South Africa as well as many others.

 

WHERE:        Thos. Moser

                        1028 33rd Street, NW

Washington, D.C. 20007

 

WHEN:          Friday, March 24, 2017, 6:30 p.m. to 9 p.m.

 

HOW:            Tickets for the event can be purchased by calling (202) 419-6620 or emailing masters.phwashington@hyatt.com.

 

Mar
25
Sat
History Happy Hour: Cocktails in Cuba @ National Archives Foundation
Mar 25 @ 2:45 PM – 4:45 PM

As part of its partnership with award-winning bartender and Chief Spirits Advisor Derek Brown, the National Archives Foundation today announced a new 2017 event series focused on the role of alcohol in America’s history.

The series will kick off with Cocktails in Cuba on March 25, 2017. The United States may have invented the cocktail, but it wasn’t long before it became entwined with the island nation of Cuba, especially through the invention of two of the world’s most recognized libations—the Daiquiri and Rum & Coke. Military intervention, organized crime and literary giants, all in the shadow of revolution, mark the fascinating history of these drinks. Experts, along with one of Cuba’s most renowned bartenders, Julio Cabrera, will discuss cocktails, Cuba and the United States, past and present. This event, which will include a reception before the seminar, will be moderated by Brown, and sponsored by the 86 Spirits Company. Registration is open now and filling up fast, more information is available online here.

“We’re excited to continue our partnership with Chief Spirits Advisor Derek Brown with this new series,” said Patrick M. Madden, executive director of the Foundation. “Derek’s passion for history pairs perfectly with our mission to connect people to America’s story in exciting and unexpected ways.”

“From landing on Plymouth Rock in search of beer to creating the cocktail, the story of America could be easily told through the drinks it has both consumed and condemned. The chance to tell that story – not just with documents but through experts in the field – is unprecedented. I’m grateful to be a part of it,” said Brown.

The event series will also include Global Spirits: American Cocktails, on June 29, 2017. Hosted by the National Archives Foundation and The Tasting Panel MagazineGlobal Spirits: American Cocktails, will kick off several days of festivities celebrating July 4, 2017. Top mixologists will be tasked with the creation of an original cocktail inspired by classic American cocktails. As the bartenders blend their concoction for judges to taste, they will describe how they were inspired to create a modern take on an American classic. Guests will have the opportunity to taste exclusive cocktails created by eight of the top bartenders from around the country. A final event, Culinary Cocktails, will be held in September 2017 (details to follow).

In 2015, the National Archives Foundation and Brown partnered on a series of events in conjunction with the then-National Archives exhibit, Spirited Republic. Brown also curated a ten-part History of the Cocktail Series to discuss the role of spirits in U.S. history. Spirited Republic explored the federal government’s efforts, successes, and failures to change our drinking habits, from whiskey rations to the Continental Army to the Whiskey Rebellion to Prohibition and beyond. The exhibit used nearly 100 National Archives records and artifacts to show the evolution of the government’s alcohol policy over time, and to illustrate the wide variety of views about alcohol held by Americans.

SheROCKS @ Embassy Suites by Hilton
Mar 25 @ 6:00 PM – 9:00 PM

SheROCKS is back for its fifth year to celebrate, honor and highlight women who are rocking the arts, business and tech industries! SheROCKS – Washington, D.C.’s premiere Women’s History Month event – will take place Friday and Saturday, March 24th – 25th, 2017. SheROCKS is one of the fastest growing events for emerging women artists and entrepreneurs, created to showcase the nation’s abundant female talent,  while creating ways to accelerate support amongst women in business.

This two-day fempreneur extravaganza will boast its signature luxury pamper party, SheROCKS Power Brunch and Mixer featuring Anastasia Wright  of IMG Agency and Krystal Williams of Doable You, and the SheROCKS main event which will be held at the Embassy Suites by Hilton Washington D.C. Convention Center. A new addition to the SheROCKS itinerary is Herstory- a Ted Talks style event – also to be held at the Embassy Suites. SheROCKS Pamper Party and Power Brunch and Mixer will be held at an undisclosed location.

This year’s SheROCKS honorees include SheROCKS Woman of the Year, Dr. Neeta Bhushan ofEmotional Grit and NeetaBhushan.com, SheROCKS Filmmaker of the Year, Antoinette Brock,  
SheROCKS Industry Power Player, Anie Akpe, founder of NetWorq App, SheROCKS Art Innovators of the Year, Sandie Luna & Debora Balardini of Punto SpaceSheROCKS Photographer of the Year, Ashleigh Bing and SheROCKS Woman in Fashion, Lyne Butterworth. 
SheROCKS Herstory Recipient, Amy Oestreicher, is a human phenomenon better known as the one woman show; she sings, acts, dances, does TEDx, composes and more all after waking from a six-month coma and surviving being unable to eat or drink for 6 YEARS.

Showcased performers will continue to be a SheROCKS highlight. Event organizers scoured the nation for the best emerging acts, narrowing it down to 14 performers. Last year’s participants, We Are Good Girl,were seen on America’s Got Talent and recently signed to Warner Brother’s Music post SheROCKS 2016. SheROCKS 2017’s showcased artists include Featured Designer, Cheero Citizen (Runway Show), Singer/Songwriter, Naimah, Actress, Markia Butler, Rapper, Joie KathosMusician, Electric Guitar, Alena Budd, Singer/SongwriterAva HovankaSpoken Word Poet, Neerali PatelSinger/Songwriter, Micah Blu,Visual ArtistLewinaleSinger/Songwriter who penned Rihanna’s debut smash, “Pon De Replay”, Alisha “M’jestie” Brooks, Dancer, Tyde Courtney EdwardsSpoken Word Poet, Michelle Kusi, former SheROCKS Headliner, Roquois and former SheROCKS Artist, The Amours.

The Four Seasons of Vivaldi and Piazzolla @ Rosslyn Spectrum Theatre
Mar 25 @ 7:30 PM – 10:30 PM

Four seasons become eight when the National Chamber Ensemble presents The Four Seasons of Vivaldi and Piazzolla on Saturday, March 25 at 7:30 p.m. at Rosslyn Spectrum. Arlington County Board Chair Jay Fisette is the special guest host for the evening.

General admission tickets are $33 for adults and $17 for students, plus applicable service charges. Tickets are available online at www.nationalchamberensemble.org and at the box office one hour prior to the performance. Group discounts for 10 or more are available by calling (703) 685-7590. For more information, call (703) 685-7590 or visitwww.nationalchamberensemble.org. The theater has free garage parking and is two blocks from the Rosslyn Metro. A wine and cheese reception with the artists follows the concert.

Inspired by landscape paintings by Italian artist Marco Ricci, “The Four Seasons” is one of Antonio Vivaldi’s most famous works. Composed during the Baroque period and published in 1725, each concerto is accompanied by sonnets, written, as most believe, by Vivaldi himself. The sonnets provide a narrative for the music, offering a more complete picture of each season as the composition weaves its way through spring, summer, fall, and winter.

The performance of Vivaldi’s “The Four Seasons” will include a reading of the sonnets by Mr. Fisette, as well as a multimedia presentation accompanying the performance that includes photos, moving images, and Vivaldi’s own words that he wrote into the music. The Ensemble’s Artistic Director Leonid Sushansky, called “a musical storyteller” by The Washington Post, will perform the violin solos with a sextet that includes two violins, viola, cello, double bass, and harpsichord.

In contrast, Astor Piazzolla’s “Las Quatro Estaciones Porteñas (The Four Seasons of Buenos Aires)” is inspired by the rhythms of the Argentinian tango. Once of Argentina’s greatest cultural exports, Piazzolla fused jazz and tango with classical forms and 20th century harmonies, creating the musical genre of nuevo tango.

Conceived as four discrete pieces, and written nearly 240 years after Vivaldi’s work of the (almost) same name, “The Four Seasons of Buenos Aires” begins with summer and concludes with spring. Originally scored for Piazzolla’s Quinteto of violin, piano, electric guitar, double bass, and bandoneón (a type of concertina), the Ensemble will perform the composition as a trio featuring Natasha Dukan on piano, Sean Neidlinger on cello, and Leonid Sushansky on violin. Images of Buenos Aires throughout the seasons accompany the musical performance.

The 2016-17 NCE season concludes on May 13 with Music of Our Time, celebrating classical music from film and theater, and an appearance by Bowen McCauley Dance.

 

About Rosslyn Spectrum Theatre

Located at 1611 N. Kent Street, Arlington VA

Parking: Free garage parking, entrance on Arlington Ridge Road

Metro: Blue/Orange/Silver – Rosslyn Station

Mar
29
Wed
9th Annual DC-CAPital Stars: The Music of Prince @ The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Eisenhower Theater
Mar 29 @ 7:00 PM – 9:30 PM

Event: 9th Annual DC-CAPital Stars: The Music of Prince

Date:  March 29, 2017 (Wednesday)

Time: 7:00 pm – 9:30 pm

Location: The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Eisenhower Theater, 2700 F St NW, Washington, DC 20566

An evening of inspiration, the 9th Annual DC-CAPITAL Stars: The Music of Prince rolls out the red carpet to showcase the outstanding artistic abilities of college-bound students from DC public and public charter schools.This glittering “American Idol”-style talent and scholarship award event attracts over 1,000 guests, award-winning celebrity judges, and prominent civic leaders to support education through the Arts. A celebratory reception with live music and dancing follows the show. Proceeds benefit the DC College Access Program, a nonprofit organization dedicated to helping DC public and public charter school high school students prepare for, enroll in and graduate from college.

 

Ticket Price: Performance plus gala reception: $500 ($350 is tax-deductible)

 

Event website:  www.dccap.org/gala

Event Honoree: The evening is dedicated to The Boeing Company for their unwavering commitment to education and District of Columbia students.

Host Committee Chair: Ted Leonsis, DC-CAP Board Chair

FRESH TALK: Ann Hamilton and Emily Pilloton—How can makers change the world? @ National Museum of Women in the Arts
Mar 29 @ 7:00 PM – 9:30 PM

WHAT:

FRESH TALK: Ann Hamilton and Emily Pilloton—How can makers change the world?

Ann Hamilton, an internationally renowned visual artist and self-described maker, joins Emily Pilloton, designer, builder, educator, author and founder of the nonprofit design agency Project H Design. The two will talk about the poetic and practical aspects of hands-on learning and how the experience of making things can inspire the next generation of innovators and creative change makers. Shop the Mini Makers Mart featuring local makers before and after the Fresh Talk.

 

WHEN:

Wed., March 29, 7–9:30 p.m.

Fresh Talk: 7–8:30 p.m.

Catalyst cocktail hour: 8:30–9:30 p.m.

Exhibition galleries open to attendees: 5–6:45 p.m.

Mini Makers Mart open to attendees: 5–6:45 p.m. and 8:30–9:30 p.m.

 

WHERE:

National Museum of Women in the Arts

1250 New York Avenue, NW

Washington, DC 20005

202-783-5000

nmwa.org

 

PRICE:

$25 general; $20 members, seniors, students; price includes museum admission and Catalyst. Reservations required. Reserve online at http://nmwa.org/events/ann-hamilton-emily-pilloton.

For more information, contact freshtalk@nmwa.org.

 

The program will be live-streamed as well as recorded and made available on the museum’s website shortly afterward. To watch the live stream, visit http://nmwa.org/freshtalk4change on the day of the event. Also, join conversations before, during and after Fresh Talk events with #FreshTalk4Change.

 

ABOUT THE SPEAKERS:

Ann Hamilton

Ann Hamilton is a visual artist internationally recognized for her large-scale multimedia installations. Using time as process and material, her methods of making serve as an invocation of place, of collective voice, of communities past and of labor present. Hamilton has received numerous awards and honors, exhibited around the world, and represented the U.S. at the 1991 São Paulo Biennial and the 1999 Venice Biennale. She is a Distinguished University Professor in the Department of Art at Ohio State University.

 

Emily Pilloton / @ProjectHDesign

Emily Pilloton is a designer, builder, educator, author and founder of the nonprofit design agency Project H Design. Using architecture and design as vehicles for social justice and public education, Pilloton is particularly invested in using design as a creative tool for young girls and students of color to build change in their own lives through projects such as Studio H and Girls Garage. She is currently a visiting associate professor of design at the University of California, Davis, and is the author of two books, Design Revolution: 100 Products that Empower People, and Tell Them I Built This: Transforming Schools, Communities, and Lives With Design-Based Education.