The calendar of events at Harvard this semester is packed with activities to carry you through the spring.
A trio of iconic filmmakers and a Pulitzer-winning author are giving free talks. The science museums are rolling out a fresh slate of innovative exhibits.
If you’re looking for a fun Valentine’s Day-themed outing, hit Oberon and test your pop-culture acumen at the “Old School Game Show.”
Those determined to stick to their New Year’s resolutions may find Daniel H. Pink’s talk on the science of perfect timing helpful. And when cabin fever sets in around spring break, plenty of events are on tap to keep minds active and dispel the winter doldrums.
— Compiled by Rebecca Coleman
Share this article
* * *
Good news for cinephiles
Wide Angle: The Norton Lectures on Cinema
As the 2018 Norton professors, Frederick Wiseman, Agnès Varda, and Wim Wenders join a distinguished club that includes the likes of T.S. Eliot, Jorge Luis Borges, and Toni Morrison. The six-lecture series is free, but tickets are required. Wiseman, Jan. 29, Feb. 5; Varda, Feb. 26, 27; Wenders, April 2, 9 (4 p.m., Sanders Theatre). As part of the lecture series, the Harvard Film Archive is showing the films of Wiseman, Varda, and Wenders, and the directors will appear in person at several of the screenings.
Caught in the Net
Playing at the Film Archive in concert with the ICA exhibit “Art in the Age of the Internet, 1989 to Today” will be movies such as Richard Kelly’s “Southland Tales” (March 10), David Cronenberg’s “eXistenZ” (March 16), and Kathryn Bigelow’s “Strange Days” (March 17).
Feminism and the Fairy Tale
The free Radcliffe film series continues to explore, as the organizers put it, the “playful pas de deux between feminism and the fairy tale” with selections like science-fiction thriller “Ex Machina” (Feb. 8) and horror comedy “The Love Witch” (April 19). (6 p.m., Radcliffe College Room, Schlesinger Library.)
* * *
Health and happiness
Forest Bathing
Relax and unplug on a leisurely walk through the Arboretum with a certified forest therapy guide. The practice is inspired by Shinrin-yoku, a term coined in Japan, where much infrastructure has been created around designated healing forests. The walks take place the first Saturday and Thursday of each month, 8‒11 a.m. ($50.)
The Scientific Secrets of Perfect Timing
Author Daniel H. Pink distills research and data on timing and turns them into practical takeaways to answer questions such as: How can we use the hidden patterns of the day to build the ideal schedule? Why do certain breaks dramatically improve student test scores? (6 p.m., Feb. 5, Brattle Theatre, $5‒$28.75 with book.)
The Sleep-Deprived Human Brain
Nora D. Volkow, the director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse at the National Institute of Health, will discuss her research on the effects of sleep deprivation on the brain. (4:15 p.m., March 29, Knafel Center, free.)
* * *
Science and technology
From Stone to Silicone
Museum staffers and Harvard students painstakingly created plaster casts of the wall carvings that once adorned ancient Mesopotamian palaces spanning more than 1,400 years. The stunning results are on display on the third floor of the Semitic Museum. (Ongoing, Harvard Semitic Museum.)
Microbial Life: A Universe at the Edge of Sight
Experience the wonders of microbial activity and the surprising beauty of bacterial forms. And get some practical advice: The exhibit’s full-scale model of a kitchen offers interactive stations answering age-old questions such as “Can I eat the leftovers?” and “What stinks?” (Through Sept. 2, 2019, Harvard Museum of Natural History.)
Analyzing Egyptian Pyramids in the Digital Age
Egyptologist Yukinori Kawae will discuss historical pyramid construction methods and how a Japanese consortium is using 3-D documentation to update survey data. (6 p.m., April 5, Geological Lecture Hall, free.)
Crossing Over: A Photographer in the MCZ
Photographer Rosamond Purcell will recount how the Museum of Comparative Zoology collections have served as models and inspiration for her strangely beautiful, often unsettling images. (6 p.m., April 12, Geological Lecture Hall, free.)
* * *
Valentine’s Day
Old School Game Show Valentine’s Special
A live interactive theater experience done with all the pageantry and analog style of a 1970s television game show. The show combines elements of pub trivia, variety specials, and comedy sketches. (8 p.m., Feb. 16, Oberon, $19.)
* * *
For book lovers
History, Identity, Politics, and the Art of Writing
Viet Thanh Nguyen, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of “The Sympathizer” and “The Refugees” will offer solutions for writers concerned with history, identity, and politics. (4:15 p.m., Feb. 8, Knafel Center.)
Harvard Square Book Circle
Discussion of Peter Godfrey-Smith’s “Other Minds: The Octopus, the Sea, and the Deep Origins of Consciousness.” In captivity, octopuses have exhibited high intelligence. How is it that a creature with such gifts evolved through a lineage so radically distant from our own? (7 p.m., Jan. 29, Harvard Book Store, free.)
To Fight Against This Age
Rob Riemen discusses his international bestseller, comprising two urgent essays about the rise of fascism and the ways to combat it. (7 p.m., Jan. 30, Harvard Book Store, free.)
* * *
Family-friendly
Bugs Bunny Film Festival
For more than 20 years, the Brattle Theatre has rolled out its classic Looney Tunes revue during school vacation week. (Feb. 16-24, Brattle Theatre.)
Amazing Archaeology Fair
Families can join in colonial-era excavations using smartphones, “travel” via virtual reality with a tour guide to Egypt or Israel using a Google Cardboard viewer, and more. Live music provided by THUD, The Harvard Undergraduate Drummers. (1‒4 p.m., March 24, Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology.)
I ❤ Science
Observe tiny, tough tardigrades (microscopic “water bears”) and make your own model. Design a Lego brick home for an insect or invent a flying creation for a wind tunnel. Meet scientists who investigate fossils, microbes, insect flight, and more. (10 a.m.‒4 p.m., Feb. 10, Harvard Museum of Natural History.)
* * *
Dance, visual arts, music
Vanity Lane
This fairy tale and ballet written by student La’Toya Princess Jackson features cutting-edge electronic music with retro ’80s influence, classical ballet blended with contemporary choreography, and a study of modern media images told in a timeless fairy-tale format. It addresses the duality of beauty and self-worth, external and internal, and urges people to look behind the mask of superficial beauty to find the true beauty within. (March 23 and 24, 7:30 p.m.; March 25, 2 p.m. at Farkas Hall, $12, $8 with student ID.)
Within Living Memory
On view across three floors of the Carpenter Center, Renée Green’s exhibition is a meditation spurred by inhabiting an architectural icon while exploring the historical and institutional legacies of modernism’s other forms, including cinema, visual art, poetry, music, and literature. It is the culmination of the artist’s two-year residency at the center. (Feb. 1‒April 15.)
The Book of Needs
The presentation of news and information is anything but objective. Countless decisions go into each article in a magazine, website, or newspaper. Peruvian artist Fernando Bryce’s 2015 work comprising 81 ink-on-paper drawings is on display at the Harvard Art Museums for the first time, stretching across two walls in the University Research Gallery. (Through May 6.)
JODI: OXO
Based on the game tic-tac-toe, “OXO” is an interactive multichannel installation influenced by early computer games, including “Noughts and Crosses,” or “OXO,” a game built in 1952 by Alexander S. Douglas. A new installation by JODI, the artist collective formed in 1994 by Joan Heemskerk and Dirk Paesmans, responds to this early history of computing, war games, and artificial intelligence. Visit the Lightbox Gallery to play OXO throughout the installation. (Feb. 7‒April 23.)
Timeless Portraits and Dreams: A Festival/Symposium in Honor of Geri Allen
Two free tribute concerts to jazz pianist and composer Geri Allen, who died over the summer. Feb. 16: Curated by Vijay Iyer, featuring Kris Davis, Craig Taborn, Jason Moran, and Iyer in solo and duo configurations. Feb. 17: Curated by Terri Lyne Carrington, featuring Carmen Lundy, Oliver Lake, Don Byron, Kris Davis, Tia Fuller, and Yosvany Terry. (8 p.m., Paine Hall.)
Godspeed You! Black Emperor
The Canadian experimental music collective, which originated in Montreal in 1994, plays the Sanders Theatre. (8 p.m., March 8.)
Musical Explorations in Brazil’s Candomblé
Genevieve Dempsey, ethnomusicologist and Mamolen Fellow, will discuss how multifaith Afro-Brazilians use music and ritual as clarion calls for survival, resiliency, and autonomy. (Noon, Jan. 31, Barker Center, free.)
Claire Chase, Premieres for Flute
Premieres of works by Pauline Oliveros, Felipe Lara, Suzanne Farrin, Richard Beaudoin, Chaya Czernowin, and Jason Eckardt. (8 p.m., March 29, Holden Chapel, free.)