Past Events
Kam’s documentary Shadow Flowers will be screened. A Q&A with the producer will follow. Campus community only, please.
This new garden space is located near the Aula. Campus community only, please.
Vieweg, Professor of Philosophy at Friedrich-Schiller University and a leading expert on Hegel, will discuss the systematic and logical beginning of philosophical thinking in conjunction with Hegel’s Science of Logic. Campus community only, please.
James Osborn, conductor
This event will be live streamed
Featuring three new works created by Hannah Littman ’22, Nerissa Tunnessen ’22, and Lily Gee ’23. Reservations required.
Drew Minter, conductor
This event will be live streamed
Featuring three new works created by Hannah Littman ’22, Nerissa Tunnessen ’22, and Lily Gee ’23. Reservations required.
Make friends, win prizes, build your resume and portfolio, and learn to code during this programming competition! Registrations are open from now until April 22. All majors welcome.
Christine Howlett, conductor
This event will be live streamed
A career conversation with the CEO of Jerry Bruckheimer Television. Campus community only, please.
James Osborn, director
This event will be live streamed
Dr. Wanhalla of Otago University will introduce two collaborative research projects during this webinar. Register to receive event link. Campus community only, please.
The author and New School professor will discuss her ground-breaking new book, Reckoning, which analyzes the emergence of the Movement for Black Lives, its organizational structure and culture, and its strategies and tactics.
In this annual Frederic C. Wood Lecture presented by the Department of Religion, Professor Woodbine of American University explores the deeper quest for meaning and identity in inner-city basketball through the lenses of religious studies, philosophy, and the reflexive sociology of Pierre Bourdieu.
Brintle, a self-taught artist born and raised in Haiti, will highlight often the untold stories of the brave women who stood for Haiti’s freedom. Attend in person or via Zoom.
A panel discussion that will also include Professor Kirsten Wesselhoeft and three students. Q&A and group conversations will follow the panelist introductions. Campus community only, please.
VRDT performs new works by Guest Choreographers Desmond Richardson and Kirven Douthit-Boyd, classical ballet by Marius Petipa, Untitled by Guest Choreographer Jennifer Archibald, new student works, and faculty works selected from the current repertoire. This is a free but ticketed event.
In service of dispelling ahistorical notions that Muslim history in the Americas begins with September 11, 2001, and is centered in the U.S., Dr. Kahn of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, will explore the colonial and postcolonial trajectory of Black Muslim literacy, literature, and cultural production in the Caribbean.
As part of the Agnes Rindge Claflin Lecture series, the Brooklyn-based artist will discuss her work.
Drawing on new archival research, this exhibition presents the contributions by three generations of the Olmsted firm to the Vassar campus. It is also the inaugural exhibition in a series about the history, preservation, and planning of the campus, organized by the Art Department.