Electronic Music Midwest (EMM) celebrates its 23rd annual festival at Lewis University. Approximately 60 composers and performers will be on campus to present new, cutting-edge, electroacoustic concert music during seven concerts. Visit emmfestival.org for more information.
Gather with friends and family for the USAF Band of Mid-America's FREE Veterans Day Concert Series! These family-friend 90-minute concerts feature the unit's 45-member concert band, and will honor our nation's veterans, share stories of their sacrifices, and reflect on all that makes us flourish as individuals and as a nation. In addition to spectacular marches and patriotic music, the concert will include Broadway tunes, jazz selections, and more.
The Pete Ellman Big Band has been entertaining Chicagoland audiences since 2009 performing at locations such as Mullen's in Lisle and Fitzgerald's in Oak Park. Committed to developing the next generation of jazz musicians, Pete and his band are often guest clinicians throughout the area. Join us as we celebrate big band jazz at Lewis with Pete Ellman and his band.
A chamber music theatre work for singing actress and trio (cello, piano, and percussion), Tres Vidas brings three legendary Latin American Women to life: Mexican artist, Frida Kahlo, Savadoran activist Rufina Amaya, and Argentinean poet Alfonsina Storni. Weaving through popular and folk songs from Latin America, Highly-acclaimed actress Rosa Rodriguez portrays all three women in a performance the Boston Globe heralded as "...a dazzling command of musical vernacular, here the Latin American kind."
Featured regularly on Chicago's premiere jazz radio station, WDCB 90.9 FM, Matt Shevitz is an in‐demand musician in the jazz, blues, and popular music scenes of the Chicago area. He has performed with many internationally renowned musicians such as Dick Hyman, Ignacio Berroa, Howard Levy, Frank Capp, Frank Wess, Eric Lindell, and Spare Parts. This concert will feature works from his albums Forward Motion (2018) and First Take! Live on WDCB (2022), an album of songs recorded during live broadcasts for WDCB 90.9 FM. Join us for an incredible jazz experience with one of the preeminent Chicago saxophonists working today.
Monarch Winds presents an evening of woodwind quintet favorites from the 20th century & Romantic era featuring selections from Bernstein West Side Story, Persichetti Pastoral, with a side-by-side quintet from the Metropolitan Youth Symphony Orchestra, Arnold Three Shanties, Danzi Quintet No.3 and Pierne Pastoral. Since 2011 Monarch Winds has provided woodwind quintet programs at Lewis University, St John’s the Evangelist Episcopal Church in Lockport and other venues in Will & Dupage counties. As the in-resident woodwind quintet at Lewis University, Monarch Winds strives to provide cultural opportunities for students and residents in the Chicagoland area.
Two visiting authors will be reading from their newly published work and providing a Q and A session: Jameka Williams and Aricka Foreman. Jameka Williams s holds an MFA in poetry from Northwestern University and is the author of American Sex Tape, winner of the 2022 Brittingham Prize in Poetry from the Wisconsin Poetry Series. She works as a Production Assistant & Editor at Haymarket Books. Aricka Foreman is the author of Salt Body Shimmer from Yes Yes Books and has fellowships from Cave Canem, Callaloo, and the Millay Colony for the Arts. She is a publicist for Haymarket Books.
Editors from Lewis University's online literary journal Jet Fuel Review as well as alums, faculty, and staff, from a variety of departments, will read published creative work--fiction, creative nonfiction and poetry--that is gathered both nationally and internationally.
Artist Statement: This work was inspired after a friend asked me to capture the essence of her adopted city of Phoenix, Arizona. Once I started the journey, I was immediately captivated. The American West has been the subject matter of artists for hundreds of years. I add these images to that history.
Rosy Petri is a multidisciplinary artist fusing portraiture and storytelling as an act of witness. She's been an Artist-in-Residence at the bell hooks center and Pfister Hotel, a Nohl Emerging Artist Fellow, and Mildred Harpole Artist of the Year. Her work can be seen at www.thisisparadisehome.com
The Nation's oldest art society is well into its second century of exhibiting art. Chicago Society of Artists' exhibitions are sought by galleries, due to their ability to interpret the real and imaginary world via artistic versatility and eclectic styles across a variety of mediums.
The Lewis University Department of Art and Design is proud to present the Senior Capstone Exhibition. This biannual art show coincides with the capstone course, Senior Project. The course challenges graduating students to put their newly acquired skills and understanding of art to the test by participating in a professional exhibition experience.
More Info Coming Soon!
More Info Coming Soon!
More Info Coming Soon!
The little prince may have returned to his own tiny planet, to tend his Rose and look after his Sheep, before a short, enchanted time, he returns to us and comes alive on stage. This play tells the story of a world, weary and disenchanted Aviator, who sputtering plane strands him in the Sahara desert, and a mysterious, regal "little man" who appears an ask him to "Please, sir, draw me a sheep." During their two weeks together in the desert, the Little Prince tells the Aviator about his adventures through the galaxy, how he met the Lamplighter and the Businessman and the Geographer, and about his strained relationship with a very special flower on his own tiny planet. The Little Prince talks to everyone, he meets: a garden of roses, the Snake and a Fox who wishes to be tamed. From each, he gains a unique insight which he shares with the Aviator: "It is only with the heart that one can see rightly." "What is essential is invisible to the eye." At length, both the little man and the Aviator must go home – each with a new understanding of how to laugh, cry and love again.
Hilariously, everything which can go wrong in a production does so. II Fornicazione is a "grim" tale of operatic adultery, poison, and mayhem. Streuth is the crime story Agatha Christie would never have dared to write. A Collier's Tuesday Tea combines the kitchen with the coal mine with an irreverent glance at D.H. Lawrence. All's Well that Ends As You Like It pushes the genius of the bard to its limit while filching lines from most of his plays. In all, cues are missed, effects fail, and props are lost and confusion reigns, but the coarse actors struggle on.
The teachers of Tumbldn high school don't live in an inspirational teacher movie. They bring mouse traps from home, they make the toilet paper last, and they show up for the kids nobody else shows up for. So when the school is slated for closure at the end of the year, and the weight of the inevitable bears down on the community, students and teachers alike, discover their breaking points. Ricky, the vice principal has stayed firmly on the sidelines for all of the teachers previous battles, but now in the 11th hour, he's compelled to step up with a plan to save the school. Some risk their futures to follow his lead, but does he actually have any idea what he's doing? spiked with humor and brimming with fury, Exit Strategy is an exhilarating call to arms about what we owe each other.
"Godspell" was the first major musical theater offering from three-time Grammy and Academy Award winner, Stephen Schwartz, (Wicked, Pippin, Children of Eden); and it took the world by storm. Led by the international hit, "Day by Day", Godspell (2012) features a parade beloved songs, including "Prepare Ye the Way of the Lord", "Learn your Lessons Well", "All for the Best", "All God Gifts", "Turn Back, O Man" and "By My Side". A small group of people help Jesus Christ, tell different parables by using a wide variety of games, storytelling techniques, and a hefty dose of comic timing. An eclectic blend of songs, ranging in style from pop to vaudeville, is employed as the story of Jesus' life dances across the stage. Dissolving hauntingly into the Last Supper and the Crucifixion, Jesus' messages of kindness, tolerance, and love come vibrantly to life. Boasting a score with chart-topping songs, a book by a visionary playwright (John-Michael Tebalak) and a feature film, Godspell (2012) is a sensation that continues to touch audiences.
Join Assistant Professor of Music, Dr. Adrianne Honnold, in a discussion of Elise Hall, the pioneering 19th century saxophonist from Boston, on the occasion of the 100th Anniversary of her death. She is the subject of a newly published edited volume that investigates the historically underrepresented contributions of women to the history of the saxophone.
Dr. Jamil Mustafa (English Studies) will draw on his new book, The Blaxploitation Horror Film: Adaptation, Appropriation and the Gothic, to discuss how mainstream and Blaxploitation horror films interpret and adapt classic Gothic tales.
Purchase Book on Amazon
Sponsored by the Film Studies Program, we will screen four short films that have won or been nominated for major awards from the Hollywood academy and film festivals around the world. Dr. Christopher Wielgos, Director of Film Studies, will host, guide conversation and answer any questions.
English Studies professor, Dr. Philippian, will discuss his new co-edited collection Inclusive Shakespeares: Identity, Pedagogy, Performance (Palgrave, September 2023), a volume that responds to the growing concern to make Shakespeare Studies inclusive of prospective students, teachers, performers, and audiences who have occupied a historically marginalized position in relation to Shakespeare's poetry and plays.
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A rapidly changing climate, accelerated by human actions (or inaction), impacts creation and the human community in multiple and complex ways. We're nearing a point when the effects of climate change will become irreversible. Communities of Color, including Indigenous peoples, regions struggling with poverty, and women with children are facing far greater consequences from our collective choices as individuals, nations, and corporations. Failure to act strategically with urgency is exacerbating ecological trauma to our earth, the compromise of health in vulnerable populations of human beings, animals and plants, and increasing the occurrence of devastating 'natural' disasters.
The 2023 Peace Teach-In seeks to explore the interdisciplinary and intersectional complexities of climate change and to seek responses together that will grow environmental justice and create greater health equity in our communities, nation and world.
Dr. Joe Kozminski (moderator)
D'Arcy Great Room
Dr. Jerry Kavouras
D'Arcy Great Room
Dr. Tina Bobo (moderator)
D'Arcy Great Room
Dr. Laurette Liesen
D'Arcy Great Room
Dr. Tina Bobo (moderator)
D'Arcy Great Room
Dr. Dominic Colonna and Venus Wozniak
D'Arcy Great Room
Dr. Christie Billups (moderator)
D'Arcy Great Room
Dr. Tom McNamara
D'Arcy Great Room
Dr. Chris White
D'Arcy Great Room
Leah Thomas
St. Charles Borromeo Convocation Hall
More Information
Join Dr. Tina Bobo for a discussion on new technologies and treatments in medicine during this presentation, which is part of the Peace Teach-in Series.
Screening of the film The Last Drop, followed by a panel discussion with the Director of the film, advocates from Guardian Angel Community Services, and staff from Frontline Forensics. The Last Drop is a sci-fi film about abuse: a young woman links minds with her boyfriend, using a device that lets couples relive shared memories-but when she spots overlooked signs of abuse, she must escape before he can manipulate her memories in his favor.
TEDx Lewis University features short presentations with big ideas! Reception to follow in the lobby of the theatre.
What kind of thing is water? How do we know water, scientifically, experientially, and ethically? This lecture and conversation explore the manytextures and designations for fresh waters, including its life-giving and pollution-carrying dimensions
in the Chicago area in recentvears. It describes the Catholic Church's theological and ethical identification of access to clean fresh water as a human right (as well as the complications that notion, especially in the legislative and judicial contexts of the United States). Finally, through the topic of fresh waters but also beyond, this lecture-discussion explores how the Catholic Church
in the current era under Pope Francis engages environmental science in formulating ethical norms.
Christiana Zenner, Ph.D., is Associate Professor of Theology, Science, and Ethics and affiliated faculty
in Environmental Studies at Fordham University- Lincoln Center. A scholar of the intersections between
ecological science and religious ethics, Dr. Zenner is the author of the book, Just Water: Theology, Ethics, and Global Fresh Water Crises, an expert on the Catholic Church's turn to ecological justice, co-editor of two scholarly books on bioethics and sustainability, author of more than a dozen peer-reviewed articles on fresh water values, climate justice, and religious ethics, and a prominent interpreter of Laudato Si.