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VERSION:2.0
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CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
X-WR-CALNAME:Starstruck: An American Tale
X-WR-TIMEZONE:Eastern Time (US & Canada)
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549179935
DTSTART:20220906T150000Z
DTEND:20220906T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549180960
DTSTART:20220907T150000Z
DTEND:20220907T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549183009
DTSTART:20220908T150000Z
DTEND:20220908T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549184034
DTSTART:20220909T150000Z
DTEND:20220909T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549186083
DTSTART:20220910T150000Z
DTEND:20220910T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549187108
DTSTART:20220913T150000Z
DTEND:20220913T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549189157
DTSTART:20220914T150000Z
DTEND:20220914T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549191206
DTSTART:20220915T150000Z
DTEND:20220915T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549194279
DTSTART:20220916T150000Z
DTEND:20220916T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549195304
DTSTART:20220917T150000Z
DTEND:20220917T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549197353
DTSTART:20220920T150000Z
DTEND:20220920T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549199402
DTSTART:20220921T150000Z
DTEND:20220921T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549201451
DTSTART:20220922T150000Z
DTEND:20220922T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549203500
DTSTART:20220923T150000Z
DTEND:20220923T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549204525
DTSTART:20220924T150000Z
DTEND:20220924T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549206574
DTSTART:20220927T150000Z
DTEND:20220927T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549208623
DTSTART:20220928T150000Z
DTEND:20220928T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549209648
DTSTART:20220929T150000Z
DTEND:20220929T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549211697
DTSTART:20220930T150000Z
DTEND:20220930T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549212722
DTSTART:20221001T150000Z
DTEND:20221001T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549214771
DTSTART:20221004T150000Z
DTEND:20221004T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549216820
DTSTART:20221005T150000Z
DTEND:20221005T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549217845
DTSTART:20221006T150000Z
DTEND:20221006T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549219894
DTSTART:20221007T150000Z
DTEND:20221007T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549221943
DTSTART:20221008T150000Z
DTEND:20221008T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549225016
DTSTART:20221011T150000Z
DTEND:20221011T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549227065
DTSTART:20221012T150000Z
DTEND:20221012T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549229114
DTSTART:20221013T150000Z
DTEND:20221013T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549231163
DTSTART:20221014T150000Z
DTEND:20221014T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549232188
DTSTART:20221015T150000Z
DTEND:20221015T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549234237
DTSTART:20221018T150000Z
DTEND:20221018T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549236286
DTSTART:20221019T150000Z
DTEND:20221019T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549237311
DTSTART:20221020T150000Z
DTEND:20221020T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871594682346
DTSTART:20221021T150000Z
DTEND:20221021T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871594684395
DTSTART:20221022T150000Z
DTEND:20221022T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549239360
DTSTART:20221025T150000Z
DTEND:20221025T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549240385
DTSTART:20221026T150000Z
DTEND:20221026T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549242434
DTSTART:20221027T150000Z
DTEND:20221027T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549244483
DTSTART:20221028T150000Z
DTEND:20221028T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549246532
DTSTART:20221029T150000Z
DTEND:20221029T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549247557
DTSTART:20221101T150000Z
DTEND:20221101T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549249606
DTSTART:20221102T150000Z
DTEND:20221102T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549250631
DTSTART:20221103T150000Z
DTEND:20221103T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549252680
DTSTART:20221104T150000Z
DTEND:20221104T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549254729
DTSTART:20221105T150000Z
DTEND:20221105T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549255754
DTSTART:20221108T160000Z
DTEND:20221108T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549258827
DTSTART:20221109T160000Z
DTEND:20221109T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549260876
DTSTART:20221110T160000Z
DTEND:20221110T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549262925
DTSTART:20221111T160000Z
DTEND:20221111T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549264974
DTSTART:20221112T160000Z
DTEND:20221112T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549267023
DTSTART:20221115T160000Z
DTEND:20221115T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549269072
DTSTART:20221116T160000Z
DTEND:20221116T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549271121
DTSTART:20221117T160000Z
DTEND:20221117T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549273170
DTSTART:20221118T160000Z
DTEND:20221118T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549275219
DTSTART:20221119T160000Z
DTEND:20221119T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549277268
DTSTART:20221122T160000Z
DTEND:20221122T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549279317
DTSTART:20221123T160000Z
DTEND:20221123T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549281366
DTSTART:20221124T160000Z
DTEND:20221124T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549283415
DTSTART:20221125T160000Z
DTEND:20221125T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549284440
DTSTART:20221126T160000Z
DTEND:20221126T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549286489
DTSTART:20221129T160000Z
DTEND:20221129T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549288538
DTSTART:20221130T160000Z
DTEND:20221130T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549290587
DTSTART:20221201T160000Z
DTEND:20221201T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549291612
DTSTART:20221202T160000Z
DTEND:20221202T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260608T074522Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40871549293661
DTSTART:20221203T160000Z
DTEND:20221203T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:Shimon Attie: Horger Artist-In-Residence\n\nInvited to create a
  new body of work as Lehigh University’s Horger Artist-in-Residence (202
 1-22) in the Department of Art\, Architecture\, and Design\, Attie has cre
 ated an artwork which interrogates Bethlehem's past and present as a micro
 cosm of America.\n\nFrom the city’s founding as “The Bethlehem of Nort
 h America” by Moravian Christian fundamentalist and utopian settlers in 
 1741\, to its later industrial heyday form the late 19th to 20th centuries
  as the capital of the American steel industry\, only to then be followed 
 by that very industry’s collapse\; and finally from the post industrial 
 economic devastation which ensued to the city’s partial economic reincar
 nation in the form of the Sands\, and then later Wind Creek\, Casino built
  on the very grounds of the former Bethlehem Steel Corporation\, Bethlehem
  is a microcosm of America.\n\nAttie’s project investigates this distinc
 tly American brew of religious utopian fervor\, industrial capitalism’s 
 rise and fall\, and finally its reinvention in catering to the hopes and d
 reams of making it big on the part of casino goers.\n\nThe completed artwo
 rk is a hybrid video and sculptural installation which complicates and con
 flates Bethlehem’s serpentine layers. The piece is comprised of a centra
 l sculptural element centered in between two channels of synchronized vide
 o.\n\nThe sculpture is inspired by the existing 90-foot-tall brightly lit 
 Bethlehem Star on the hill\, built by the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce in
  1937 as a commercially minded endeavor to brand Bethlehem as The Christma
 s City. The Star on the hill is brightly lit in “Christmas white” and 
 on a clear evening is visible for 60 miles.\n\nAbout Shimon Attie\n\nShimo
 n Attie is an internationally renowned visual artist whose practice includ
 es creating site-specific installations in public places\, immersive multi
 ple-channel video and mixed-media installations.  For two decades\, Attie 
 has made art that allows us to reflect on the relationship between place\,
  memory and identity. In many of his projects\, he engages local communiti
 es in finding new ways of representing their history\, memory\, and potent
 ial futures\, and explores how contemporary media may be used to re-imagin
 e new relationships between space\, time\, place and identity.  For his pr
 oject in Bethlehem\, Attie is filming members of the community in four or 
 five specific locations around the city\, hoping to distill "some of [the]
  curious intersections of different layers [from] Bethlehem's past and pre
 sent." \n\nAmong his many accomplishments\, Attie has developed works of p
 ublic art in Berlin\, Tel Aviv\, Rome\, New York\, Boston and San Francisc
 o. His work also has been featured in numerous exhibitions including at Th
 e Museum of Modern Art in New York City\, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris
 \, the Art Institute of Chicago and The National Gallery of Art in Washing
 ton\, D.C. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize and Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  and holds the Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award in Art.\n\nAttie wil
 l be the Horger Artist-in-Residence with the Department of Art\, Architect
 ure\, and Design through Fall 2022\, engaging students in the development 
 of his new work. In addition\, Attie will teach a seminar course encompass
 ing public art\, community engaged practices\, site specific installation\
 , performance and a range of topics related to social practice. \n\nFor mo
 re information visit Shimon's website here.\n\nAbout the Horger Artist-in-
 Residence\n\nEstablished in 2016\, The Theodore U. Horger ’61 Endowed Ar
 tist-in-Residence for the Performing and Visual Arts was created through a
 n estate gift from the late Horger in order to bring visiting artists to t
 he university. A visiting artist is in residence rotating each year among 
 the departments of Music\, Theatre and Art\, Architecture\, and Design.  A
 ttie is the sixth artist-in-residence in the program and AAD's second. In 
 2018\, Karyn Olivier\, professor of sculpture at the Tyler School of Art a
 nd Architecture at Temple University\, was the department's inaugural Horg
 er Artist-in-Residence.\n\nGallery Hours: Tuesday 11AM-7PM\; Wednesday-Fri
 day 11AM-5PM\; and Saturday 1PM-5PM
LOCATION:LUAG Main Gallery\, LUAG Main Gallery
SUMMARY:Starstruck: An American Tale
URL;VALUE=URI:https://eventscalendar.lehigh.edu/event/starstruck_an_america
 n_tale
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
