It is with sadness that we acknowledge the rise in covid-19 cases in our community and the need to cancel Central Ohio Youth Ballet production of “The Nutcracker” in November and December 2020. We are rescheduling the production for Friday, January 22 at 7:30pm, Saturday, January 23, at 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m., and Sunday, January 24, at 2 p.m. pending COVID-19 statistics in early January 2021. For those who have purchased tickets, we appreciate your support and would like for you to consider the following options: 1.) change your ticket to one of the above listed performance dates/times 2.) request a refund 3.) or convert your ticket purchase to a tax-deductible contribution to The Central Ohio Youth Ballet, a 501(c)(3) organization. Please consider your desired option and email techdirector@kpacohio.org with your choice. We wish you Happy Holidays, The directors of The Woodward Opera House and The Central Ohio Youth Ballet
It is with sadness that we acknowledge the rise in covid-19 cases in our community and the need to cancel Central Ohio Youth Ballet production of “The Nutcracker” in November and December 2020. We are rescheduling the production for Friday, January 22 at 7:30pm, Saturday, January 23, at 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m., and Sunday, January 24, at 2 p.m. pending COVID-19 statistics in early January 2021. For those who have purchased tickets, we appreciate your support and would like for you to consider the following options: 1.) change your ticket to one of the above listed performance dates/times 2.) request a refund 3.) or convert your ticket purchase to a tax-deductible contribution to The Central Ohio Youth Ballet, a 501(c)(3) organization. Please consider your desired option and email techdirector@kpacohio.org with your choice. We wish you Happy Holidays, The directors of The Woodward Opera House and The Central Ohio Youth Ballet
Titanic, The Musical examines the causes, the conditions and the characters involved in this ever-fascinating drama. This is the factual story of that ship—of her officers, crew and passengers, to be sure—but she will not, as has happened so many times before, serve as merely the background against which fictional, melodramatic narratives are recounted. The central character of our Titanic is the Titanic herself.
January 22–April 11, 2021
Buchwald-Wright Gallery, Gund Gallery
The Art of Trees reveals the many resonances, forms, and relationships of trees. Exploring themes of restoration and destruction, community and isolation, location and identity, and fragile temporalities, the artists featured in the exhibition experiment with a range of mediums, and even use trees as creative collaborators to express our essential and inseparable bond with these guardians of the earth. The Art of Trees invites an interdisciplinary dialogue about personal, local, and global relationships to the environment, while simultaneously drawing attention to interactions between trees themselves, the communities they form, and their resilience despite human interference.
Featuring: Nearby Voices
Nearby Voices bridges the gap between global and local environmental concerns by engaging with the art and voices of local community members. This special section of The Art of Trees exhibition offers artistic reflections on the local landscape as a shared point of witness and imagines trees as archives of commonly held stories and experiences that branch across generations of a community.
The Art of Trees is curated by a committee of Gund Associates, Kenyon faculty, and Gund Gallery staff who worked together in a collaborative, multi-year process to bring this project to life.
It is with sadness that we acknowledge the rise in covid-19 cases in our community and the need to cancel Central Ohio Youth Ballet production of “The Nutcracker” in November and December 2020. We are rescheduling the production for Friday, January 22 at 7:30pm, Saturday, January 23, at 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m., and Sunday, January 24, at 2 p.m. pending COVID-19 statistics in early January 2021. For those who have purchased tickets, we appreciate your support and would like for you to consider the following options: 1.) change your ticket to one of the above listed performance dates/times 2.) request a refund 3.) or convert your ticket purchase to a tax-deductible contribution to The Central Ohio Youth Ballet, a 501(c)(3) organization. Please consider your desired option and email techdirector@kpacohio.org with your choice. We wish you Happy Holidays, The directors of The Woodward Opera House and The Central Ohio Youth Ballet
January 22–April 11, 2021
Buchwald-Wright Gallery, Gund Gallery
The Art of Trees reveals the many resonances, forms, and relationships of trees. Exploring themes of restoration and destruction, community and isolation, location and identity, and fragile temporalities, the artists featured in the exhibition experiment with a range of mediums, and even use trees as creative collaborators to express our essential and inseparable bond with these guardians of the earth. The Art of Trees invites an interdisciplinary dialogue about personal, local, and global relationships to the environment, while simultaneously drawing attention to interactions between trees themselves, the communities they form, and their resilience despite human interference.
Featuring: Nearby Voices
Nearby Voices bridges the gap between global and local environmental concerns by engaging with the art and voices of local community members. This special section of The Art of Trees exhibition offers artistic reflections on the local landscape as a shared point of witness and imagines trees as archives of commonly held stories and experiences that branch across generations of a community.
The Art of Trees is curated by a committee of Gund Associates, Kenyon faculty, and Gund Gallery staff who worked together in a collaborative, multi-year process to bring this project to life.
January 22–April 11, 2021
Buchwald-Wright Gallery, Gund Gallery
The Art of Trees reveals the many resonances, forms, and relationships of trees. Exploring themes of restoration and destruction, community and isolation, location and identity, and fragile temporalities, the artists featured in the exhibition experiment with a range of mediums, and even use trees as creative collaborators to express our essential and inseparable bond with these guardians of the earth. The Art of Trees invites an interdisciplinary dialogue about personal, local, and global relationships to the environment, while simultaneously drawing attention to interactions between trees themselves, the communities they form, and their resilience despite human interference.
Featuring: Nearby Voices
Nearby Voices bridges the gap between global and local environmental concerns by engaging with the art and voices of local community members. This special section of The Art of Trees exhibition offers artistic reflections on the local landscape as a shared point of witness and imagines trees as archives of commonly held stories and experiences that branch across generations of a community.
The Art of Trees is curated by a committee of Gund Associates, Kenyon faculty, and Gund Gallery staff who worked together in a collaborative, multi-year process to bring this project to life.