Long Island University C.W. Post Campus
C.W. Post Campus B. Davis Schwartz Memorial Library


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The Post Library Association
Exhibits and Events

The Post Library Association is devoted to planning many cultural and educational functions for the B. Davis Schwartz Memorial Library. In the quarter century that the Post Library Association has been in existence it has contributed greatly to the cultural life on the C.W. Post campus in general and in the Library specifically. The Hutchins Gallery has become a showcase of fine art with its wide variety of beautiful art exhibits that have been uniformly praised for their high quality. The PLA "Friday Night Programs", a dinner and lecture series, have attracted a wide array of nationally and internationally renowned scholars. Other events sponsored by the PLA include the annual book sale, various booktalks, poetry readings and special events, such as museum and opera trips.


Friday Night Programs

March 14 - The Parts of Ten Famous Songs You've Probably Never Heard
David Fuchs, concert and lecture.
We all know that the invention of the phonograph record revolutionized the music business. Sheet sales were no longer the economic engine of the industry. Suddenly singers had a life of their own, whether they were Broadway stars or not. Entire scores could be recorded. People who never got near a theatre knew them by heart. But those old 78s did away with something else as well - the 'verses,' or introductions to the songs. They could not hold the verse plus two choruses. Since it was the chorus, the familiar melody, that people wanted, two choruses were played and the verse was dropped. It was not until the CD came along that the entire work began to reappear, and the wonderful ingenuity of the verses, or the 'set up,' could be experienced. This will be a musical evening in which we will play and discuss ten famous songs, their verses and the people who wrote them.

April 18 - Why We Speak the Way We Do
Richard Auletta, lecture.
Professor Auletta will focus on the ways in which American English has changed dramatically in both accent and idiom because of the movements of various communities, including those of Germans, Scots and Jews. Professor Auletta, an Assistant Professor, has been a member of the Foreign Language Department of C.W. Post for more than thirty years. He received a B.A. from Long Island University and an M.A. from the State University of New York at Buffalo.

May 16 - Introducing Antoine Vollon: A 19th-Century Master Painter
Carol Tabler, lecture.
The French nineteenth-century painter Antoine Vollon rose to the top of his profession during the 1870s when the rebel movement called Impressionism had begun to assert itself. He established his reputation as a painter of still life, an art form which, at the time, was considered inferior to the painting of the human figure. Vollon's distinctive painterly style, displayed in his landscape paintings as well as his still lifes, brought him accolades from the critics. One of them noted that "if painting had not existed, Vollon would have invented it". During this transitional period of art history, Vollon's anti-academic, personal expressiveness can be viewed as aligning him with modernist aesthetic tendencies and makes him a fascinating artist to study. Carol Forman Tabler has published numerous articles on Vollon, who was the subject of her doctoral dissertation at the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University.

Programs are free and open to the public. Programs begin at 8:00 p.m. in the library lobby. Please call 516-299-2892 to reserve a seat.

Social hour and dinner before the programs begin at 6:00 p.m. in the Hutchins Gallery. Reservations are required. $34 per person. Call 516-299-2892.

Explanation of Charges:
  • Our charges per person cover only our out-of-pocket costs.
  • The PLA makes no profit but tries to avoid losses.
  • Members who cancel within 48 hours of the event remain responsible for payment as we must pay their costs.

Art Exhibits
Hutchins Gallery Hours: Tuesday-Saturday, 2:00-5:00 p.m.


Apr 30 - May 9: Master's Thesis Show
C.W. Post Art Department
Beatrice J. Chang: Inspiration from Underground Kingdom
Lisa Dunn: Simulacrum
Emily Hertzberg: Breakfast, Lunch, Happy Hour, Dinner (photographs)
Carol A. Palma: Transformation (mixed media)
John Rapone: Head in the Gutter (sequential art and illustration)
Shannon Rideout: In Fashion (photographs and designs)
Artists' Reception: Wednesday, April 30, 5:00-8:00 p.m.


May 17 - Jun 6: Local Treasures
Original approaches to expression by artists who go beyond originality
John Digby: Archival Collages
Richard Gachot: Found Object Art
Faith McCurdy: Architectural Limnings
Frank Olt: Ceramic Abstractions
Arden Scott: Bronze Ship Skeletons
Sally Shore: Triaxial Ribbon Weaving
Marcia Widenor: Paper Quilts
Artists' Reception: Sunday, May 18, 4:00-6:00 p.m.


Jun 12 - Jun 20: Oriental Brush Painting
In Kwon Kim


Earlier this year:


Jan 20 - Jan 30: Found Drawing
Rim, Jai Kwang


Jan 20 - Jan 30: Dialogue
Lee, Sang-Bong


Feb - Mar: Paintings in Oil
Monica Spier


Feb - Mar: Fine Art Photography
Art Goldberg
Reception: Wednesday, March 12, 5:00-8:00 p.m.


Mar 25 - Apr 16: Seven Painters and Seven Sculptors
The Second Annual Long Island Professional Artist's Showcase

7 Painters:
Ruth Baderian
Leslie Barnett
Karen Kluglein

Marvin Mattelson
Donna Harlow Moraff
Marie Sheehy-Walker
Rhoda Sherbell

7 Sculptors:
Arthur Bernstein
Daniel C. Brown
Edith Rae Brown

Alexander Chwick
Dave Haussler
Marilyn Newmark
Kiril Tzotchev

  

Reception: Sunday, April 6, 1:00-4:00


Apr 21 - Apr 25: Master's Thesis Show
C.W. Post Art Department


Special Events
Open to members and their guests


April 16 - Morgan Library and Museum, and Battery Park
Travel by bus to Manhattan for a tour of the Morgan Library and Museum. This historic site and architectural landmark began as the private library of financier Pierpont Morgan. Today it is a museum, independent research library, and a musical and performing arts venue. There will be ample time to self-tour the collections and exhibitions, especially the exhibit Michelangelo, Vassari, and Their Contemporaries: Drawings from the Uffizi. In the afternoon, the bus will travel to Manhattan's southern tip and visit Battery Park. This is where the group will have lunch and conclude the day with a quick tour of the area.


May 15 - Princeton Art Museum
Founded in 1882, the Princeton University Art Museum is one of the leading university art museums in the country. From a founding gift of a collection of porcelain and pottery, the collections have grown to over 60,000 works of art that range from ancient to contemporary art and concentrate geographically on the Mediterranean regions, Western Europe, China, the United States, and Latin America. One of the current exhibitions is Invoking the Comic Muse: Toulouse-Lautrec's Parody of "The Sacred Grove". This focus exhibition is centered on a painting by Henri Toulouse-Lautrec that simultaneously pokes fun of and pays homage to the winner of the highest prize at the 1884 Salon, Puvis de Chavannes's "Sacred Grove Dear to the Arts and Muses", also on view. The tour will also see the exhibit An Educated Eye: the Collections of the Princeton University Art Museum and have lunch on the Princeton Campus.

For additional information, please call 516-299-2892.


BookTalk
Open to members and their guests


To be announced


PLA Annual Book Sale 2008

March 26,Wednesday, 8:00 a.m.-11:00 p.m. : Open to PLA Members and LIU Cardholders only
March 27,Thursday, 8:00 a.m.-11:00 p.m. : Open to the Public
March 28, Friday, 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. : Open to the Public
March 29, Saturday, 10:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m. : Open to the Public

The Post Library Association is happy to accept book donations through March 20th:
  • All books (except textbooks), as well as books on tape, music tapes, records, CDs, video tapes, and DVDs are accepted.
  • Especially rare, new, special editions, and fine bindings.
  • Label bags and boxes clearly: "PLA BOOK SALE"

Bring books to the B. Davis Schwartz Memorial Library
  • Call first (516-299-2892) to make sure that someone will be available to receive your books. With the exception of weekends, books may be dropped off at the Receiving Department at the northwest corner of the Library.
  • If your quantity of books exceeds your transportation, please call 516-299-2892, and we will try to arrange a pick-up.


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