Robert will be joined by his wife and the book's illustrator, Katherine Oakes. The reading will be followed by a youth ghost tour of this historic mansion. The reading and tour are geared toward children ages 8–12.
West African artist Georges Adéagbo's evolving exhibit "Create To Free Yourselves: Abraham Lincoln and the History of Freeing Slaves in America" opened Saturday and runs through Sept. 4.
During the Festival – from Thursday, July 27- Monday, July 31, audiences will partake of a rich sampling of what’s happening on the current international contemporary music scene.
Readings will run from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Monday, and 1 to 5 on Sunday until the novel's more than 200,000 words are read aloud.
"Together" is created in dialogue with both Elizabeth Atterbury's exhibition "Oracle Bones" and the Clark's natural setting. The performance begins at 6:30 pm on the Clark's Fernández Terrace.
Like Goodell, who started at Minerva when he was 9 years old, most members of the company for "The Lightning Thief" have experience with the nearly 30-year-old non-profit.
In collaboration with museum staff, Andrea Belair, co-owner of Belltower Records in North Adams, Mass., has selected musicians who will each compose five- to 10-minute pieces inspired by an artwork in Remixing the Hall.
The gallery, located at 38 Main St., is open Thursday through Monday from 11 a.m. until 4 p.m. and features work by figurative artist Mollie Kellogg and abstract artist Shany Porras.
This production engages an interdisciplinary creative team of artists and scholars and weaves together dance, music, visual art, projection and text to reimagine an intergenerational love story that has shaped American literature.