Showing posts with label DIA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DIA. Show all posts
4.15.2018
AT THE DIA: PLAY BALL COMMEMORATES 50TH ANNIVERSARY OF 1968 WORLD SERIES!
THU, MAR 29, 2018 — SUN, SEP 16, 2018
The DIA exhibition commemorates the 50th anniversary of the Detroit Tigers’ 1968 World Series victory with memorabilia, baseball cards and collectibles. If you were a kid then, you won’t believe the feeling of being then again. If you’ve only heard about it, you’ll discover what the time was all about.
Play Ball! Baseball at the DIA
Take a step back in time and celebrate the great American pastime of baseball at Play Ball! Baseball at the DIA, featuring items from the Michigan-based E. Powell Miller collection and the Detroit Institute of Arts. This exhibition commemorates the 50th anniversary of the Detroit Tigers’ 1968 World Series victory with memorabilia, baseball cards and collectibles. Visitors will also experience the extraordinary opportunity to view more than 500 baseball cards known as the “T206 White Border Set.” Miller’s collection of these vintage cards is noted for its rarity and superlative condition, and includes a Joe Doyle “error card” as well as the coveted and rare Honus Wagner card.
Visitors also will experience the extraordinary opportunity to view more than 500 baseball cards known as the “T206 White Border Set.” Miller’s collection of these vintage cards is noted for its rarity and superlative condition, and includes a Joe Doyle “error card” as well as the coveted and rare Honus Wagner card.
The exhibition runs through Sunday, Sept. 16 at your Detroit Institute of Arts.
Labels:
1968,
BASEBALL,
DETROIT TIGERS,
DIA,
MUSEUM,
Tiger Stadium,
WORLD SERIES
12.04.2017
HOLIDAY WEEK AT THE DETROIT INSTITUTE OF ARTS!
Between Christmas and New Year's, the Detroit Institute of Arts offers extended hours filled with activities for visitors of all ages! Enjoy exhibitions, puppet performances, art-making workshops, films and more. Current exhibitions are "Monet: Framing Life," "Church: A Painter's Pilgrimage," "D-Cyphered: Photographs by Jenny Risher" and "Making Home: Contemporary Works from the DIA." The DIA's newly re-installed Japanese art gallery is also open.
The DIA is open Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday, Dec. 26, 27, 28, and 30, from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m., Friday, Dec. 29 from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m., and Sunday, Dec. 31, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Note: The museum will be closed Sunday, Dec. 24, Monday, Dec. 25 and Monday, Jan. 1.
Tickets are required for "Monet: Framing Life," "Church: A Painter's Pilgrimage" and the 2017 British Arrows. All other programs are free with museum admission and for residents of Wayne, Oakland and Macomb counties. View a complete schedule of events HERE.
6.04.2016
CINETOPIA INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL 2016!!!
Thanks to the help from their Cinetopia partners at the Arab American National Museum, Cinema Detroit, the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History, College for Creative Studies, the Henry Ford Giant Screen Experience, the N’Namdi Center for Contemporary Art, the Maple Theater, Redford Theatre, Campus Martius, New Center Park, Ford Resource and Engagement Center, and the Ann Arbor Summer Festival, together with the Michigan Theater and the State Theatre in Ann Arbor, movie lovers now have approximately 120 screenings from which to choose over the festival’s ten days! online excel to pdf converter
Labels:
CINETOPIA,
CINETOPIA.MICHIGAN THEATER,
DIA,
FILM PREMIERES,
FILMS,
IGGY POP,
MICHIGAN THEATER
5.01.2015
CINETOPIA INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES 2015 FILMS & EVENTS!
Cinetopia Festival, recently named as the best Detroit area film festival, today announced an expanded schedule of films and events taking place June 5-14 in Detroit and Ann Arbor. Spanning ten days this year (up from five days in 2014),
Cinetopia brings more 70 films to the Detroit/Ann Arbor area – representing the best feature-length dramas, comedies, and documentaries from the world’s best festivals, including Sundance, Cannes, Venice, Toronto, Berlin, SXSW and Tribeca.
See the attached list of films and visit cinetopiafestival.org for full film descriptions, trailers and dates/times/locations of all screenings and events.
In addition to the impressive array of films, curated specifically for Cinetopia by a dedicated team of programmers led by Michigan Theater CEO and Cinetopia founder Russ Collins and Elliot Wilhelm, Director of the Detroit Film Theatre series at the DIA, a majority of the screenings will include special post-film events, including presentations, discussion panels, and Q&A sessions with directors, writers, and stars of the films being presented.
The festival will feature more than 100 screenings of 72 films, in an expanded array of venues throughout Detroit and Ann Arbor. Besides the Detroit Film Theatre, additional Detroit venues include the Arab American National Museum, Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History, College for Creative Studies, Cinema Detroit, The Redford Theatre, Senate Theater, and The Maple Theater. In addition to the historic Michigan Theater, Ann Arbor venues include The State Theater and UM Modern Language Building.
Cinetopia will open on Friday, June 5th with a free outdoor screening on the DIA’s North Lawn of the stunning new animated film Kahlil Gibran’s The Prophet. The event is being presented in partnership with Midtown Detroit, Inc. and the film is being presented at Cinetopia as part of the Arab Film Festival (see below).
The Prophet, by Lebanese author Kahlil Gibran, is among the most popular volumes of poetry ever written, having been published in over 40 languages since its publication in 1923. The book's timeless verses have been given new form in this anthology film, directed by some of the world's foremost animators, among them Tomm Moore (The Secret of Kells) and Bill Plympton (Idiots and Angels).
With a score by Gabriel Yared that includes contributions from Glen Hansard, and Yo-Yo Ma, the film is also a musical collaboration, a richly spiritual experience worthy of Gibran's lyrical book. This festive kickoff evening will begin at dusk (7pm) on the DIA North Lawn with a live jazz interpretation of Holst’s The Planets by the Mike Jellick Ensemble, followed by the screening at sundown (9:30pm).
More special highlights of the 2015 Cinetopia include:
The Arab American National Museum’s Arab Film Festival, offering eight fascinating new titles from one of the most currently prolific and creative group of filmmakers on the planet, including the opening night film Kahlil Gibran’s The Prophet.
All acclaimed on the international festival circuit, these films by both Arab World and Arab American artists are, with few exceptions, unlikely to reach American commercial theaters. Genres include drama, comedy and documentary, in both short-form and feature lengths. Each of these films is subtitled in English, making them accessible to all.
The University of Michigan’s Orson Welles Centennial Symposium, presented by the University’s Department of Screen Arts & Culture and the UM Libraries, celebrates the richness of the libraries’ Welles archival holdings and brings together donors, scholars, students and media makers who have used the archives to give us a better understanding of the man and the artist. In honor of his 100th birthday, Cinetopia will screen several Welles films, some are rarely seen, and host post-film discussions in conjunction with the symposium.
Detroit Voices, a short film competition which invites Michigan filmmakers to share their community’s point of view via film. The winners of the competition will be announced during Cinetopia and their films will be screened as part of the festival. The brainchild of local filmmaker Sultan Sharrief and launched in 2014, Detroit Voices has helped to recognize several talented artists with both screen time and cash awards. DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSIONS IS MAY 4!
In addition to the film screenings and discussions, the festival includes several free outdoor film screenings in addition to the opening night festivities at the DIA. On June 11, Ann Arbor will host an outdoor screening of the summer film classic Jaws on Maynard at Liberty Street, free and open to the public.
The Cinema Circus series of free outdoor screenings continues this year with eight events taking place from May 30 to August 22, bringing films to communities across Detroit and extending the Cinetopia experience.
Cinetopia passes are on sale now at cinetopiafestival.org and include Festival Passes (offering unlimited film screenings, priority admission, opening night parties and other hospitality events), Movie Passes (unlimited film screenings and priority admission) and, for the first time, Student Passes for those with valid student identification (unlimited film screenings).
A Personal Sponsorship Pass is also available for individuals interested in supporting special features like guest filmmaker appearances and post-screening panel discussions.
Tickets to individual films are $12 for the general public and $9 for DIA, DFT, Wright Museum, Arab American Museum, and Michigan Theater members and go on sale for the general public on May 22 at cinetopiafestival.org.
The Cinetopia International Film Festival would not be possible without the generous support of our title sponsor University of Michigan Health System and our presenting sponsors Knight Foundation, MGM Grand Detroit, Opportunity Detroit and Masco Foundation.
Labels:
ANN ARBOR,
CINETOPIA,
CINETOPIA.MICHIGAN THEATER,
DETROIT EVENTS,
DETROIT VOICES SHORT FILM COMPETITION,
DIA,
FILMS
5.13.2014
KEEP THE VULTURES AWAY FROM DETROIT'S INSTITUTE OF ART!
Maybe some great news for Detroit! Looks like the BIG 3 may be coming together to save our beloved DIA...Hasn't Detroit been raped and pillaged enough by politicians? Sell something else....maybe the governor can donate his 14 kt gold slinky to the cause...I am so sick of watching this city taking such a beating......
The Detroit Three automakers are considering giving tens of millions of dollars to the Detroit Institute of Arts toward its $100-million obligation to help reduce pension cuts and protect art from being sold in the city’s bankruptcy, the Free Press has learned. FULL STORY HERE
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