BRIDGE
The Institute LIbrary 847 Chapel Street, New Haven, CTA low key evening of bridge, for people who know how and people who don't know anything at all.
A low key evening of bridge, for people who know how and people who don't know anything at all.
Senso di Voce: Megan Kyle (oboe & English horn) and Esin Gunduz (voice, composition, tremolo harmonica, bass harmonica, harmonium) performing an original work '... through itself...', inspired by Islamic thinker, poet, scholar, and mystic, Ibn 'Arabî.
A series of three films, this time bringing Francophiles joy as we screen three French classics. August 29th: Beauty and the Beast (Cocteau, NR, 1946, run time 1 hr. 36 mins.); Sept 12: Orpheus (Cocteau, NR, 1950, 95 minutes); Sept. 26: The 400 Blows (Truffaut, NR, 1959, 99 minutes)
A little chance to relax and think and absorb noted works of poetry as read by its authors. This month, we continue our tour of Caedmon recordings from the 20th century, and visit the 1950s recordings of Pound, Eliot, and Sitwell: Masters of Irony, Collage, and Innovation? Or Complicated Fops and Poseurs?
Joan Kwon Glass's most recent collection, Daughter of Three Kingdoms, is the winner of the 2024 Perugia Press Poetry Prize. Daughter of Three Gone Kingdoms explores themes familiar to those who know Kwon's work: it's described as part lamentation and part hymn—an illumination of diasporic hungers, hauntings, absence, and resilience. This collection "explores colonialism and “postcolonialism” through disordered eating, suicide loss, religious damage, familial estrangement, addiction, motherhood, and recovery.
A series of three films, this time bringing Francophiles joy as we screen three French classics. August 29th: Beauty and the Beast (Cocteau, NR, 1946, run time 1 hr. 36 mins.); Sept 8: Orpheus (Cocteau, NR, 1950, 95 minutes); Sept. 26: The 400 Blows (Truffaut, NR, 1959, 99 minutes)
Hours: Tues – Fri: 11-5 / Sat: 12-2 Sun & Mon: Closed
Opening Reception for Glorious Index: New Haven Fall Open Studios, 2024
A low key evening of bridge, for people who know how and people who don't know anything at all.
Spend an evening listening to brilliant short fiction read aloud by actors from the New Haven Theater Company. After the reading the stories are broken down, discussed, illuminated, if you will, by Bennett Lovett-Graff.
Friday Happy Hour Jazz at the Institute Library will continue a swinging tour of that great American art form, “LP Jazz”, meeting at 5:15 or so every Friday, in the third floor music room, to consider, contemplate and appreciate the wonders in the Collection.
Spinning Poetry is a program where we’re invited to hear poets as they read their own works, many of which are old familiar pieces, but many of which have fallen out of fashion or just gotten swallowed by time. By playing Caedmon Records’ recordings of these readings, we can gain a new appreciation for works we’ve gotten accustomed to just seeing, if we see them at all, on a printed page. Now: the voices come alive! Held monthly, with Philip Beard as your literary tour guide.