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- Weeks of Welcome
- Re-Birth - Art Installation by Sheila Pree Bright12:00 am
- Hostile Terrain 94 - InstallationAll day
- "Who Is My Neighbor?" Art by John August Swanson6:00 am
- SHS Flu Clinic9:00 am
- ECE Prospectus Defense: Minxu Peng10:00 am
- As, Not For: Dethroning Our Absolutes11:00 am
- Discuss the Election 11:00 am
- Community Check-in: Connecting in the Time of COVID11:00 am
- CISE Industry Roundtable: Stefano Di Cairano12:00 pm
- The Graduate Student and Postdoc’s Guide to Personal Finance 2:00 pm
- MSE PhD Prospectus Defense of Abigail Rendos3:00 pm
- Employer Info Session: Amazon (Women Who Code)3:00 pm
- Discuss the Election - a Facilitated Discussion3:30 pm
- : A Semiparametric Approach to the Detection of Change-points in Volatility Dynamics of Financial Data (Huaiyu Hu - Boston University)4:00 pm
- Mind, Body, Spirit Yoga5:30 pm
- Panel Event: Domestic Violence during COVID-196:00 pm
- Discuss the Election - A Discussion with Students and Staff6:00 pm
- Student Life in Israel with Professor Mira Angrist6:00 pm
"Who Is My Neighbor?" Art by John August Swanson
This collection of prints and posters created by John August Swanson speak to the Boston University School of Theology’s theme, Power, Privilege, and Prophetic Witness. Through colorful images and compelling text drawn from the Bible, writings by prominent theologians, poets, and activists, Swanson tells us the stories of those that inspire us to be better human beings. The viewer sees with our eyes how themes of ecology, assisting underserved populations, and equal rights for all are cries for justice and community. Depictions of figures like St. Francis of Assisi, and the words of Martin Luther King, Jr., Daniel Berrigan, S.J., Pope Francis, John F. Kennedy, Franklin D. Roosevelt, and E.E. Cummings ask the viewer to consider the harsh truths about unfair wages, global warming, the strife of indigenous people, immigration reform, Black lives, and other complex social issues. Swanson serves to motivate us, to push us into action through expressive art and language. And hopefully, we accept his challenge, though the path to peace is riddled with pain, struggle, and sacrifice. Today, more than any other moment in recent history, we must explore the works of this artist to better understand ourselves so we may fight for a better world.
When | 6:00 am – 7:00 am every day until Thursday, December 10, 2020 |
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Building | 745 Commonwealth Avenue |
Room | Moore Community Center and Online |
Contact Name | Kara Jackman |
Phone | 617-353-1323 |
Contact Email | kjackman@bu.edu |
Contact Organization | STH Library |
Fees | Free |