Skip to Main Content

Focus Initiative Public Events

Date 2024 Events Location
January 30 -
June 8
Richard and Carole Cocks Art Museum Exhibit: "The World in Which We Live: The Art of Environmental Awareness" Richard and Carole Cocks Art Museum
January 30 -
June 8
Richard and Carole Cocks Art Museum 13th Annual Capstone exhibition: Landscape in Art: An Art & Architecture History Capstone Exhibition Richard and Carole Cocks Art Museum
February 15,
5:30-6:30 PM
Rebecca Jim: Demanding Justice for Tribal Lands: Environmental Wrongs Must Be Made Right 152 Shideler
February 29,
3:00-4:30 PM
Gallery Conversation with LaToya Ruby Frazier on Flint is Family
Supported by Department of Art, the Humanities Center, and the Richard and Carole Cocks Art Museum
Richard and Carole Cocks Art Museum
February 29,
6:00 PM
The John W. Altman Program in the Humanities presents Latoya Ruby Frazier: Award-Winning Artist. Art as Transformation: Using Photography to Effect Change Armstrong Pavilion C
March 5,
5:00 PM
Dr. Robert Musil. Rachel Carson and Environmental Justice: Her Legacy for Today Shriver JDOL-A
March 13,
5:00-7:00 PM
Art History Capstone Exhibition Opening Reception and Student Gallery Talks: Landscape In and Around Us
Supported by the Art Museum Membership Association and the Department of Art at Miami University.
Richard and Carole Cocks Art Museum
March 19,
5:00 PM
The John W. Altman Program in the Humanities presents Julie Sze: Professor of American Studies and Director of the Environmental Justice Project at the University of California, Davis. Climate Justice as Freedom Shriver Center, Heritage Room
March 20,
12:00 PM
Art and Environment Webinar: Mary Edna Fraser and Orrin Pilkey. In association with the Miami University Alumni Association.
Virtual
April 2,
5:00 PM
The John W. Altman Program in the Humanities presents Elizabeth Rush: Author and Assistant Professor of Nonfiction Writing, Brown University. Creation and Community at the Ends of the Earth Armstrong Pavilion C
April 10,
5:00-7:00 PM
John Sabraw: Reclamation of Acid Mine Drainage as a Medium for Change. The World in Which We Live Artist Talk & Reception.
Sponsored by the Three Valley Conservation Trust.
We are also grateful for the support from the Department of Art and the FOCUS Program at Miami University.
Learn more about this event
Richard and Carole Cocks Art Museum
April 18,
5:00 PM

The John W. Altman Program in the Humanities Symposium

Keynote Lecture: Jennifer James, Associate Professor of English, George Washington University: Black Eco-Feminism and Abolitionist Ecology

Shriver Center Heritage Room
April 19,
1:00 PM

The John W. Altman Program in the Humanities Symposium

Keynote Lecture: Michelle Neely, Professor of English, Connecticut College: Everything is Going to Have to Be put Back: Responsibility and Repair in the Anthropocene

Shriver Center Heritage Room

Changing Climate, Changing Communities Art Exhibition

Although climate change is often thought to impact faraway places in the future, there are real consequences here and now. Fortunately, solutions to climate change can begin right now at a community level. We invite you to reflect on what climate change means to you or show how the issue impacts our local community: near and far, now and in the future.

CALL FOR ART: CLIMATE CHANGE EXHIBIT

Summary

The Oxford Community Art Center (OCAC), in partnership with ECO (Engaging on Climate in Oxford), is seeking submissions for the 3rd Changing Climate, Changing Communities Art Exhibition.

All entries must be submitted no later than February 15, 2024. Work will be displayed from March 8 to April 5, 2024, with a reception opening the exhibition during the Second Friday Celebration of the Arts on March 8 from 6-9 p.m.

All media will be considered, including the written word.

Pieces exhibiting diverse concepts, materials or mediums, and creativity will take precedence. Every effort will be made to exhibit all entries.

No entry fee is required

Submit your images and artist statement by emailing Bonnie Kretschmer at bonnie@oxarts.org. You will be notified if your work is selected, and a contract will be sent to you. Accepted artworks are insured while they are at the OCAC. Artists are responsible for transportation and insurance while art is in transit.

Deadline

Deadline for submissions: February 15, 2024
Deadline for accepted work to arrive at OCAC: March 4, 2023
Exhibition dates: March 8 - April 5, 2024
The exhibition opening reception is Friday, March 8 at 6pm.

 

Date 2023 Events Location
August 22 -
December 16
Richard and Carole Cocks Art Museum Student Response Exhibit: "It's Our World". Richard and Carole Cocks Art Museum
September 7,
5:30 PM
The Gene and Carol Willeke Frontiers in Environmental Sciences Distinguished lecture, presented by the Institute for the Environment and Sustainability (IES): Jonathan Foley Shideler 152
September 12,
5:00 PM
The John W. Altman Program in the Humanities presents Sunil Amrith: Renu and Anand Dhawan Professor of History, Yale University. Why Migration Matters for Environmental Justice Armstrong Pavilion C
September 25,
5:00 PM
The John W. Altman Program in the Humanities presents David Schlosberg: Professor of Environmental Politics, University of Sydney, and Director of the Sydney Environment Institute. Meanings of Environmental Justice in Contemporary Practice Shriver Dolibois AB (online talk to a live audience)
October 11,
5:00 PM
The John W. Altman Program in the Humanities presents Julian Yates: H. Fletcher Brown Professor of English and Material Culture Studies. University of Delaware. Noah's Arkive: Stories of Survival During Climate Catastrophe Armstrong Pavilion C
October 24,
7:00 PM
The John W. Altman Program in the Humanities presents Winona LaDuke: Activist and Author. The Next Energy Economy: Grassroot Strategies and the Future of Environmental Justice Armstrong Wilks Theater
November 8,
5:00-7:00 PM
Richard and Carole Cocks Art Museum Student Response Exhibit: "It's Our World" Reception and Awards Richard and Carole Cocks Art Museum
November 9,
7:30 PM
Dr. James W. Porter: Blurring the Lines between Medicine and Ecology while Saving Coral Reefs in the Florida Keys. 100 Laws Hall
November 10,
1:00 PM
The Department of Geography Presents David Padget Shideler 152
November 14,
7:00 PM
The John W. Altman Program in the Humanities presents Sandra Steingraber: Professor of Biology and Activist. To Sin by Silence: The Legacy of Rachel Carson in an Age of Climate Emergency Armstrong Pavilion C
focus tribal sovereignty