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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220101
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220416
DTSTAMP:20260516T031012
CREATED:20211222T181552Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220404T175028Z
UID:10001974-1640995200-1650067199@www.guildhall.org
SUMMARY:Volunteers of Guild Hall 2022 Online Art Exhibition\, Parts I & II
DESCRIPTION:Suzanne Sylvor\, President of Volunteers of Guild Hall (VoGH)\, has announced VoGH’s first web-based art exhibition showcasing VoGH artist members. “After our successful 2019 exhibit at the Amagansett Library\, we wanted to continue in a COVID-safe\, winter-warm location. What could be more welcoming than our own website?” said Sylvor. \nPart One of the exhibition website launched on January 1\, 2022 and will be online for three months\, closing March 31\, 2022. Part Two is now on view through April 15\, 2022. \nThe artist members support Guild Hall’s 90-year tradition of interest in all aspects of the arts: volunteering at Guild Hall’s theater\, galleries\, and at special events. Many of the artists exhibit and sell at major and local galleries and have their own websites. The artwork will be available to purchase\, and interested buyers can contact the artists directly about those exhibited and other works. \nParticipating Artists: Pamela M. Abrahams\, Laurie Adler\, Nancy Brody\, Carol David\, Elli Dukofsky\, Maris Elman\, Dale Grant\, Ronnie Grill\, Barbara Groot\, Lorraine Papacosta\, Rosa Hanna Scott\, Karen Simon\, Suzanne Sylvor\, Ursula Thomas\, Irwin Weinbaum\, Susannah Weinbaum\, Judith Wit \nTo see their work\, visit VoGH’s website:  volunteers-of-guild-hall.constantcontactsites.com \nImage Caption: Busy Bee by Suzanne Sylvor \n\nABOUT VOLUNTEERS OF GUILD HALL\nVoGH are dedicated group of volunteers assisting the Guild Hall staff where and when needed. They are an independent non-profit incorporated organization that operates with a constitution and by-laws. For over 40 years\, invaluable volunteer energy has been channeled into supporting Guild Hall as the center of cultural\, educational\, and entertaining activities in the town of East Hampton and the surrounding communities. \nFor more information\, visit volunteers-of-guild-hall.constantcontactsites.com.
URL:https://www.guildhall.org/events/volunteers-of-guild-hall-2022-online-art-exhibition/
LOCATION:No Venue
CATEGORIES:Community
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.guildhall.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/Suzanne-Sylvor-flowers.png
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220215
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220516
DTSTAMP:20260516T031012
CREATED:20220215T141915Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220221T003342Z
UID:10001978-1644883200-1652659199@www.guildhall.org
SUMMARY:Yemandja: Behind the Work
DESCRIPTION:Join us for this in depth conversation with Angélique Kidjo\, Naïma Hebrail Kidjo\, Cheryl Lynn Bruce\, and Mary Jane Marcasiano about the exciting world premiere production of Yemandja.  \nYemandja premieres at MASS MoCA in North Adams\, MA on March 4 & 5. Learn more and buy tickets at\nhttps://massmoca.org/event/yemandja-world-premiere/\n \n“…there is Yemandja in every culture.” — Angélique Kidjo  \nGlobal superstar and four-time Grammy Award winner Angélique Kidjo stars in Yemandja\, a new music theater work that is at once family drama and historical thriller\, redolent of Greek tragedy and infused with themes of love\, betrayal\, honor\, free will\, and the horror and injustice of slavery. Named for a Yoruban deity\, this MASS MoCA co-commission is a panoramic work of magical realism\, a parable about gods and humans that illuminates through song what can happen when people are robbed of their culture.  \nCreated in residency at MASS MoCA\, Yemandja is written by Naïma Hebrail Kidjo\, directed by Cheryl Lynn Bruce\, with visual design by artist Kerry James Marshall\, and features a cast of 10 performers plus four musicians.  \nLast year\, Kidjo was honored as one of the BBC’s 100 most inspiring and influential women from around the world and named one of Time magazine’s “100 Most Influential People of 2021.” Read the Time tribute by Alicia Keys here. \nYemandja\nConceived by Angélique Kidjo\, Jean Hebrail & Naïma Hebrail Kidjo\nBook & Lyrics by Naïma Hebrail Kidjo \nMusic by Angélique Kidjo & Jean Hebrail \nDeveloped with and Directed by Cheryl Lynn Bruce \nProduction Designer Kerry James Marshall \nMusic Director Darryl Archibald \nLighting Designer Kathy A. Perkins \nProjections Designer Rasean Davonte Johnson \nCostume Designer Mary Jane Marcasiano \nChoreographer Beatrice Capote \nSound Designer Kumi Ishizawa \nDramaturg Iyvon E. \nSensitivity Coach Ann James \nCasting Andrea Zee  \nYemandja is co-commissioned by MASS MoCA\, ArtsEmerson\, The Broad Stage at Santa Monica College\, Brown University Arts Institute\, Cal Performances\, Ruth and Stephen Hendel\, Holland Festival\, The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts\, and Yale Schwarzman Center. Produced by THE OFFICE performing arts + film.  \n*Yemandja program description by MASS MoCA*  \nRecorded and edited by Patrick Dawson for Guild Hall
URL:https://www.guildhall.org/events/yemandja-behind-the-work/
LOCATION:No Venue
CATEGORIES:@Home
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.guildhall.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/Kidjo_Headshot_c-Patrick-Fouque.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220215
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220516
DTSTAMP:20260516T031012
CREATED:20220215T144216Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220302T020449Z
UID:10001980-1644883200-1652659199@www.guildhall.org
SUMMARY:Walter Isaacson’s The Code Breaker
DESCRIPTION:RECORDING OF JULY 10 BOOK TALK IN THE JOHN DREW THEATER \n\nThe next great innovation revolution: CRISPR\, gene editing\, and Jennifer Doudna \nThe bestselling author of Leonardo da Vinci\, Einstein\, and Steve Jobs  returns with a gripping account of how Nobel prize winner Jennifer Doudna and her colleagues launched a revolution that will allow us to cure diseases\, fend off viruses\, and improve the human species. \nBestselling author Walter Isaacson has established himself as the biographer of creativity\, innovation\, and genius. Einstein was the genius of the revolution in physics\, and Steve Jobs was the genius of the revolution in digital technology. We are now on the cusp of a third revolution in science\, a revolution in biochemistry that is capable of curing diseases\, fending off viruses\, and improving the human species itself. The genius at the center of his newest book\, The Code Breaker(available on March 9\, 2021)\, is American biochemist Jennifer Doudna (pronounced DOWD-nuh)\, who is considered one of the prime inventors of CRISPR\, a system that can edit DNA. \nDoudna’s story begins when she was a sixth-grader in Hilo\, Hawaii\, and she came home from school one afternoon to find a book on her bed. It was The Double Helix\, James Watson’s account of how he and Francis Crick had discovered the structure of DNA\, the spiral-staircase molecule that carries the genetic instruction code for all forms of life. Doudna put the book aside\, thinking it was a detective tale. When she read it\, she discovered that she was right\, in a way. As she sped through the pages\, she became enthralled by the race to put together clues\, both in competition and cooperation with other scientists\, that culminated in the 1953 discovery of the building block of life. Even though her high school counselor told her girls didn’t become scientists\, she decided she would. \nThe structure of DNA was the 20th century discovery that would have the most effect on the 21st. But at first its impact was somewhat underwhelming. Beginning in 2006\, Jennifer Doudna helped change that. Her studies focused not on DNA\, a field dominated by men\, but on what seemed more of a backwater in biochemistry: figuring out the shapes and structure of RNA\, a closely related molecule that enables the genetic instructions coded in DNA to express themselves by directing the creation of protein for new cells. \nDriven by a passion to understand how nature works and to turn discoveries into inventions\, she would help to make what James Watson told her was the most important biological advance since his co-discovery of the structure of DNA. She and her collaborators turned their curiosity into an invention that would transform the human race: an easy-to-use tool that can edit DNA. Known as CRISPR\, it opened a brave new world of medical miracles and moral questions \n“This year’s prize is about rewriting the code of life\,” the secretary general of the Royal Swedish Academy proclaimed in announcing that Doudna and her collaborator\, Emmanuelle Charpentier\, had won the 2020 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. “These genetic scissors have taken the life sciences into a new epoch.” \nThe Moral Dilemma\nWith The Code Breaker\, Isaacson shows what it took for Doudna to defy the odds as woman in a male-dominated field. His gripping narrative twists and turns through the risks she took\, the rules she broke\, the alliances she formed\, the competition she bested\, and the moral dilemmas she faced along the way. After helping to discover CRISPR in 2012\, Doudna became a leader in wrestling with the ethical implications of this invention and helping set up the guardrails we are going to need as a civilization.  \nBecause at the core of this book is a moral dilemma: Should we use our new evolution-hacking powers to eliminate dreaded disorders like Tay-Sachs and sickle cell anemia? Should we edit our genes to make us less susceptible to deadly viruses? And what about preventing congenital deafness and blindness? Or being very short? Or being depressed? Should we allow parents to enhance the IQ or memory or muscles of their kids? Our newfound ability raises some uncomfortable questions about what might that do to the diversity of our societies. If these offerings at the genetic supermarket aren’t free (and they won’t be)\, will that greatly increase inequality—and indeed encode it permanently in the human race? \nIn 2018\, the world’s first “designer babies” were engineered and born: twin girls in China with genes that had been edited with CRISPR to make them immune to the virus that causes AIDS. There was an immediate outcry of shock and awe. After three billion years of evolution\, one species (us) had developed the talent and temerity to grab control of its own genetic future. There was a sense that we had crossed the threshold into a whole new era\, like when Adam and Eve bit into the apple or when Prometheus snatched fire from the gods. \nDoudna has been at the forefront of scientists who are grappling publicly with these moral issues. At one point when she was developing CRISPR\, Doudna had a nightmare in which she was summoned to meet a powerful client who wanted to learn how it worked. When the client looked up\, it was Adolf Hitler. That spurred her to become a key organizer of groups that are trying to find a path forward that allows CRISPR to fulfill its promising potential while preventing it from being misused. \nThe Coronavirus Vaccine\nMost recently\, however\, Doudna and the other pioneers of CRISPR have been deployed in the war against our most immediate threat—the coronavirus—and Isaacson brings readers up-to-the-moment reporting on that fight. The gene-editing tool that Doudna and others developed in 2012 is based on a virus-fighting trick used by bacteria\, which have been battling viruses for about three billion years. CRISPR systems allow bacteria to remember and then destroy deadly viruses. In other words\, it’s an adaptive immune system against viruses—just what we humans need in an era that has been plagued by repeated waves of viral epidemics. \nFrom the moment COVID-19 emerged\, catching the federal government flatfooted\, Doudna recast her team’s gene-editing system to develop a scalable and reliable test for the virus\, with the eventual bigger goal of making us invulnerable to the future ones coming our way. Up until COVID-19\, Doudna and her rivals were elbowing each other out of the way to get ahead in the race for CRISPR and other big discoveries. But when the pandemic hit\, they put their competition aside and locked arms in the race to save lives. CRISPR has since enabled new forms of testing and treatments\, and it has helped with the creation of an easily reprogrammable vaccine that can quickly be tailored to any new virus that comes along. \nThe Code Breaker tells Jennifer Doudna’s story\, a thrilling scientific tale that involves the most profound wonders of nature\, from the origins of life to the future of our species and carries the urgency of meeting the crisis we face today. As Isaacson writes\, “the development of CRISPR and the race to fight coronaviruses will hasten our transition to the next great innovation revolution: a life-science revolution. Children who study digital coding will be joined by those who study the code of life.”
URL:https://www.guildhall.org/events/walter-isaacsons-the-code-breaker/
LOCATION:No Venue
CATEGORIES:@Home
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.guildhall.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Walter-Isaacson-1-AUTHOR-PHOTO.jpeg
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