Will you still love me when I’m no longer young and beautiful?

New York City is packed with amazing culture and inspiring art, but sometimes it’s difficult to break the Morningside-bubble and experience it all first-hand. “Where Art Thou” is a weekly guide to interesting and notable lectures, events, and performances for the literary/musically/theatrically-inclined on campus.

On Campus:

  • Miller Theater’s Pop-Up Concerts series continues with Isabel Lepanto Gleicher, a rising talent in the flute scene. From the website: “For her solo debut at Miller, she has curated a program of flute works that are perfect for the intimate setting of a Pop-Up concert.” See it free On Tuesday, 6 PM.
  • Also on Tuesday (12 PM), Amherst Professor Klára Móricz comes to the Harriman Institute to discuss one of the most interesting phenomena in enduring Russian culture: the near-worship of Pushkin. In “Pushkin Divided,” she will discuss how Pushkin was appropriated differently by the Russian emigrant community in 1930s Paris, and by the Soviet Russian state.

Off Campus

  • Tonight at 7 PM, head down to Performance Space New York for Acephalous Monster, a theatrical exhibit by Ron Athey. The “Acéphale” is the headless man, a symbol of transformation between man and god, between the mundane and the radically sacred. Student tickets $15. https://ci.ovationtix.com/203/production/997583?performanceId=10316520
  • Monday, 8 PM, The Tank. High by the Beach: The Odyssey meets Lana del Rey. I don’t know what this is. But. I want to go. Tickets $10.

Image via Flickr