Illinois Mobile App Master Calendar
17 matches found
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RBML’s new exhibit celebrates the 75th anniversary of Gwendolyn Brooks’s 'Annie Allen' – the poetry collection that won the first Pulitzer Prize by a Black author – and explores the rich history of Black literature’s emergence into the mainstream. On display through May 2025.
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In honor of 90 years of the Preservation Services Unit, the staff has curated an exhibit that tells the story of our department. If you've ever worked with us, wondered what we were doing behind the scenes, or want to know more about the history of the unit, come see the exhibit in the Main Library Gallery and North-South Corridor during the month of April 2025.
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The Age of Innovation. Experience exciting exhibits and competitions during Engineering Open House 2025!
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EOH is the nation’s largest student-run STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math) fair, where participants have the opportunity to showcase independent engineering projects and innovations. EOH 2025 features over 200 exhibits, including 10 student startups, and 14 special events such as rocket launches, student-engineered cars, and escape rooms.
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Celebrate the exhibition opening of "Missing and Murdered Indigenous Relatives (MMIR): Red Regalia Project" created with Chicago-based Native artist Angel Starr (Omaha, Odawa, Three Affiliated Tribes of North Dakota) to call attention to violence against Indigenous Peoples. Part of the 2024–25 Native North American Art Residency. Reception in Link Gallery.
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Through portraiture, testimony, archives and sound, iWitness presents a poignant and deeply moving narrative of the Armenian Genocide (1915-1923) as told by its last surviving eyewitnesses.
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Photographers Ara Oshagan and Levon Parian will present a two-part art exhibit from their iWitness project at the Siebel Design Center in the spring culminating in a moderated talk at 5pm on April 24th at the Siebel Center.
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IML Research Groups will present posters on their work this semester. Please feel free to stop in at any time during the event to meet the students and learn about their work.
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The IGB’s Art of Science program is a celebration of the common ground between science and art. Images from Illinois research were the starting point for these works, which were created by researchers working in partnership with IGB artist Julia Pollack. These pieces are the result of conversations between the scientists and the artist.
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Don’t miss the final week of the "Making Place for the Arts at Home: Performance and Midcentury Modern Architecture" exhibition! On view through Saturday, July 12. During the summer, the museum is open Tuesday–Friday 10–5 and Saturday 10–4. Free admission.