Campus events: March 1–31, 2020
Hello from Bates!
These are public events at the college during March 2020. The public is invited to these events. Except as noted, admission is free.
Need directions? Here’s a campus map.
Want the latest events information? Visit the daily Events page.
Updated in this edition:
- We previously published an incorrect start time for the Micromassé concert on March 21. The correct time is 7:30pm. We regret the error.
- We previously published an incorrect start time for the Capital Duo concert on March 22. The correct time is 3pm. We regret the error.
- The Andrews Lecture, scheduled for March 30 and featuring Thelathia “Nikki” Young, will be postponed until fall.
- The Education Symposium on March 31 has been canceled.
Can’t attend the game? Watch the livestream:
- Go to gobatesbobcats.com
- Hover over the “Media” tab
- Click the “Livestreams” link and look for your event. (Not all games are livestreamed.)
Questions or comments? Contact events editor Doug Hubley at calendar@bates.edu.
Recurring events
Taking place while Bates is in session. Please confirm before you go.
4:15pm Mon | Dharma Society Mindfulness Mondays: An activity, drawn from a rotating assortment, to provide exposure to mindfulness practices. All are welcome. FMI mschapir@bates.edu.
Chase Hall, Skelton Lounge
6:30pm Mon | Zen Service: Ninety-minute Soto Zen Service with seated and walking meditation, chanting and practice interviews (daisan). Neither commitment nor prior experience are necessary to attend. FMI abrownel@bates.edu.
Chase Hall, Skelton Lounge
7:30pm Tue–Sun | Dharma Society meditation: A 20-minute silent group meditation. Cushions or chairs provided, and orientations provided upon request. FMI abrownel@bates.edu.
Chase Hall, Skelton Lounge
6pm Wed | Life drawing with the Museum of Art. Dry-media easels and drawing benches provided, bring drawing board and supplies. $10/$9 museum members; $90/$80 for pre-purchased 10-session tickets. FMI 207-786-8302.
Olin 259
7pm Wed | Ballroom Team Practice: Ballroom team practice, featuring rhythm (cha-cha, rhumba, swing) and smooth (waltz, foxtrot, tango, Viennese waltz) styles of dance. Practice is open to everyone, regardless of experience, and no partner is necessary. Please RSVP to ali@bates.edu.
Merrill Gym
9pm Wed | {pause}: The Multifaith Chaplaincy offers a deeply reflective, secular half-hour of silence, poetry, music, dance and art. FMI 207-786-8272.
Muskie Archives
4 Wed
4pm | The Complex Life of the HIV-1 Full-length RNA: A lecture by Ricardo Soto Rifo, associate professor of virology at the University of Chile’s Institute of Biomedical Sciences. FMI dcutten@bates.edu.
Carnegie 204
5pm | Men’s lacrosse vs. Keene State.
Garcelon Field
5 Thu
4:15pm | Fantasies of Nina Simone: A talk by Jordan Stein, associate professor of English and comparative literature at Fordham University. Sponsored by the English department. FMI dcutten@bates.edu.
Pettengill G21
7:30pm | AJ Johnson, trombonist: This Harvard Fellowship recipient presents an evening of jazz, sharing the stage with a group comprising Bates faculty and students. Free but tickets required: batesconcerts.eventbrite.com. FMI 207-786-6135 or email olinarts@bates.edu.
Olin Concert Hall
7:30pm | Stupid F**king Bird: “Sort of adapted” from Chekhov by Aaron Posner, it’s The Seagull on steroids: Con hates his mother, but Nina, the girl he adores, lusts after his mother’s lover. Mix equal parts ambition, sex and alcohol, and what you get is a recipe for madness. Directed by Tim Dugan, assistant professor of theater. Free but reservations appreciated: bit.ly/bates-theater-dance. $5 donations gratefully accepted. FMI 207-786-6161.
Schaeffer Theatre
6 Fri
3pm | Block Print Workshop: Relief printing is one of the oldest methods for mass-producing art. Learn to use modern printmaking materials to create a simple graphic image suitable for framing or greeting cards. Space is limited, registration required — reserve early! Ages 8 and up, children under 12 must be accompanied by an adult. $5 per person (free for Bates students). To register or FMI, please contact Elizabeth Boyle at eboyle2@bates.edu or 207-786-6417.
Mays Center
7:30pm | Stupid F**king Bird (see March 5).
Schaeffer Theatre
7 Sat
1pm | Men’s lacrosse vs. Trinity.
Garcelon Field
1pm | Maine in the Movies: Olive Kitteridge. Oscar-winner Frances McDormand (Fargo) and Oscar-nominee Richard Jenkins (The Visitor) star in Lisa Cholodenko’s HBO adaptation of the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel by Elizabeth Strout ’77. Outspoken teacher Olive has a complex relationship with husband Henry, a good-hearted pharmacist. Each has traits the other adores, but their son resents her behavior and hates his dad being a victim. Presented by the rhetoric and screen studies department and the Maine Film Center as part of the latter’s Maine in the Movies festival. Free but reservations requested: reserve or FMI. (2014, 239 min.).
Olin Concert Hall
5pm | Stupid F**king Bird (see March 5).
Schaeffer Theatre
8 Sun
2pm | Stupid F**king Bird: See March 5 for play specifics. Following today’s performance, the theater department inaugurates the Sunday Speaker Series, a curated conversation on the themes of the play. Martin Andrucki, Charles A. Dana Professor of Theater, will discuss how playwright Aaron Posner “sort of adapted” SFB from Chekhov’s The Seagull. He’ll be joined by facilitator and SFB director Tim Dugan, assistant professor of theater, and assistant director Kush Sharma ’23. Q&A follows. FMI 207-786-6161.
Schaeffer Theatre
9 Mon
4:15pm | Empire Crossings: The Global History of a Crusader Icon of St. George. Heather Badamo, an art historian at the University of California, Santa Barbara, researches the cult of medieval warrior saints through the lens of its icons — images of aggressive saints believed to perform miracles of salvation and conversion — which provide insights into issues of interfaith relations between Christians and Muslims during the era of the Crusades. Sponsored by the Department of Art and Visual Culture. FMI 207-786-8212.
Olin 104
7:30pm | American Islamophobia: A talk by Khaled Beydoun, author of American Islamophobia: Understanding the Roots and Rise of Fear. Beydoun is a public activist, law professor and leading intellectual on civil rights. Q&A follows. Sponsored by the Muslim Students Association. FMI 207-786-6305.
Chase Hall, Memorial Commons
7:30pm | Stupid F**king Bird (see March 5)
Schaeffer Theatre
10 Tue
4:30pm | Women’s lacrosse vs. Southern Maine.
Garcelon Field
11 Wed
4pm | Men’s tennis vs. MIT.
Wallach Tennis Center
4:15pm | Faith in the Future: Nostalgic Nationalism in Iraq and Egypt. A lecture by Magnús Bernhardsson, chair of Arabic Studies and Brown Professor of History and Faculty Affiliate in Leadership Studies and Religion, Williams College. Sponsored by the Dean of the Faculty’s Office. FMI 207-753-6933.
Pettengill G52
12 Thu
7pm | Lauren Alleyne, poet: Alleyne, whose writing has been called “a revelatory and formidable fusion of irrepressible music and uncompromising craft,” is the author of Difficult Fruit (2014) and the prizewinning Honeyfish (2019). Literary Arts Live is sponsored by the English department. FMI dcutten@bates.edu.
Chase Hall, Skelton Lounge
13 Fri
7:30pm | Hughie & Gene: These two one-act plays have unlucky characters and a notable playwright in common. Eugene O’Neill wrote Hughie, a conversation between a small-time hustler and a hotel night clerk. Patrick Reilly ’21 directs. In Ron Hirsen’s Gene, directed by Deon Custard ’21, a one-time actor desperately tries to connect with his old friend O’Neill. Free but reservations appreciated: bit.ly/bates-theater-dance. $5 donations gratefully accepted. FMI 207-786-6161.
Schaeffer Theatre, Black Box Teaching Lab
14 Sat
Noon | Women’s lacrosse vs. Amherst.
Garcelon Field
5pm | Hughie & Gene (see March 13).
Schaeffer Theatre, Black Box Teaching Lab
15 Sun
2pm | Hughie & Gene (see March 13).
Schaeffer Theatre, Black Box Teaching Lab
21 Sat
11am | Women’s lacrosse vs. Middlebury.
Garcelon Field
Noon | Baseball vs. Plymouth State.
Leahey Field
7:30pm | Micromassé: Hailing from Portland, Maine, Micromassé combines the classic sound of the Hammond organ with electric guitar and drums to create instrumental jazz that is at once nostalgically analog, worldly and explosively modern. The trio will perform selections from their new release In What Remains. Tickets $10, available at batesconcerts.eventbrite.com. An Olin Concert Series presentation. FMI 207-786-6135 or olinarts@bates.edu.
Olin Concert Hall
22 Sun
3pm | Capital Duo: Duncan Cumming ‘93 and Hilary Cumming present an evening of early and middle Beethoven works for piano and violin. Free but tickets required: batesconcerts.eventbrite.com. FMI 207-786-6135 or olinarts@bates.edu.
Olin Concert Hall
23 Mon
7pm | Emi Mahmoud: A Sudanese-American poet and peace activist, Mahmoud reads from her poetry and discusses her human rights work. A former refugee, Mahmoud was the 2015 World Poetry Slam Champion and is now a United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Goodwill Ambassador. She is also the founder of the peace movement One Girl Walk. Part of the Harward Center’s Theory into Practice series, this event is presented in partnership with the University of Maine School of Law’s Justice for Women series. FMI 207-786-8283.
Muskie Archives
25 Wed
3pm | Softball vs. University of New England.
Lafayette Street Field
26 Thu
7:30pm | Fantastic Fungi: Louie Schwartzberg’s film deals with fungi, the mycelium network, interconnectedness and more, capturing the essential role of mycelium “communication” and fungi to planetary health. The Bates screening is one of more than 500 taking place around the world on this date, creating a unique immersive consciousness-shifting event. See the trailer. (2019, 81 min.) FMI jbelive2@bates.edu.
Carnegie 204
7:30pm | The Gap: Nicole tells her sister Lee she was abducted by aliens. Lee goes on a performance-art journey to figure out why. Emma Goidel’s play brings them closer to articulating the truth about that strange childhood moment that neither can exactly name. A senior thesis production directed by Alison Greene ’20. Free but reservations appreciated: bit.ly/bates-theater-dance. $5 donations gratefully accepted. FMI 207-786-6161.
Pettigrew Hall, Gannett Theater
27 Fri
11am & 3pm | Pysanky! Learn the Art of Ukrainian Egg Decorating With Lesia Sochor. A Maine artist of Ukrainian descent, Sochor learned this ancient spring tradition from her mother. The Pysanka, a decorated egg, has origins among Slavic peoples as far back as 5,000 B.C. and was deeply important in spring rituals. $10 per person (free for Bates students). Children under 10 must be accompanied by an adult. Sponsored by the Bates College Museum of Art. Registration required: Please call 207-786-8212 to register or FMI.
Mays Center
7:30pm | The Gap (see March 26).
Pettigrew Hall, Gannett Theater
28 Sat
Noon | Baseball vs. Bowdoin.
Leahey Field
1pm | Men’s lacrosse vs. Williams.
Garcelon Field
5pm | The Gap (see March 26).
Pettigrew Hall, Gannett Theater
29 Sun
1pm | Men’s tennis vs. Tufts.
Wallach Tennis Center
2pm | The Gap (see March 26).
Pettigrew Hall, Gannett Theater
4pm | Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9: The Bates College Choir and Orchestra join the Maine Music Society Chorale and Orchestra, as well as the Schola Cantorum of the Basilica of SS Peter and Paul and the chamber choirs of Edward Little and Lewiston high schools, to present Ludwig van Beethoven’s master work and mark the 250th anniversary of his birth. $25 and up (plus ordering fees), with discounts for students and seniors, available at the MMS website. FMI info@mainemusicsociety.org.
Basilica of SS Peter and Paul, Ash Street
30 Mon
7pm | Queering the Moral Imaginary: This event will be rescheduled for the fall semester. FMI 207-786-8272.
Muskie Archives
7:30pm | The Gap (see March 26).
Pettigrew Hall, Gannett Theater
31 Tue
2:30pm | Education Symposium: This event has been canceled. FMI takerley@bates.edu.
Museum of Art
bates.edu/museum | museum@bates.edu
Through March 28
Vanessa German: Miracles and Glory Abound: The familiar painting “Washington Crossing the Delaware” by Emanuel Leutze is the starting point for German’s sculptures. Using her own power-figures to imitate Leutze’s composition, she sparks a conversation about public memory and rewriting history through the lens of privilege.
Ralph Eugene Meatyard: Stages For Being: Bringing concepts from Zen Buddhism and Surrealism to his photography, Meatyard (1925–72) painstakingly staged images in rural Kentucky that, working on multiple levels, are best read like poetry that uses symbolic language to provoke reflection and revelation.