Upcoming Events

Previous Month

September 2020

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01
Sep

The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope

Exhibition

Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.

"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.

Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
01
Sep

African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection

Exhibition

"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
01
Sep

Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction

Exhibition

During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
02
Sep

Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction

Exhibition

During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
02
Sep

African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection

Exhibition

"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
02
Sep

The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope

Exhibition

Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.

"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.

Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
02
Sep

CCA's Midweek Music Series: Jazz Jams

Arts/Entertainment

Join us outdoors under the big tent on the Engineering Quad for a weekly concert brought to you by the Caine College of the Arts. In accordance with USU's policy on face coverings, masks are required for all events.

Join USU jazz students in an informal jam session. All are welcome to sit in on a tune, or to simply relax and enjoy the music. Special guests include USU jazz faculty professors Jon Gudmundson, saxophone; Braun Khan, bass; Max Matzen, trumpet; Jason Nicholson, drums; Nate Ostermiller, guitar; Greg Wheeler, saxophone.

7:00 pm - 8:00 pm |
03
Sep

African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection

Exhibition

"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
03
Sep

The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope

Exhibition

Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.

"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.

Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
03
Sep

Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction

Exhibition

During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
04
Sep

The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope

Exhibition

Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.

"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.

Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.

10:00 am - 7:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
04
Sep

African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection

Exhibition

"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.

10:00 am - 7:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
04
Sep

Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction

Exhibition

During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.

10:00 am - 7:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
04
Sep

Esports Club Opening Social

Student Activities

Play video games and get aquatinted with our past varsity esport teams!

6:00 pm - 11:30 pm | Education Building |
05
Sep

African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection

Exhibition

"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.

10:00 am - 3:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
05
Sep

The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope

Exhibition

Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.

"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.

Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.

10:00 am - 3:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
05
Sep

Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction

Exhibition

During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.

10:00 am - 3:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
07
Sep

Labor Day

Holidays | Holiday Calendar

USU will be closed September 7 2020 in observance of Labor Day.

All Day |
08
Sep

African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection

Exhibition

"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
08
Sep

The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope

Exhibition

Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.

"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.

Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
08
Sep

Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction

Exhibition

During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
09
Sep

Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction

Exhibition

During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
09
Sep

The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope

Exhibition

Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.

"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.

Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
09
Sep

African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection

Exhibition

"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
09
Sep

Uintah Basin Aggie Blueprint

Information/Orientation

No matter where you are in your college journey, get help from your personal USU success team.
Take the next step towards a rewarding career by investing in you and your education.

Join us to learn about all the tools to help you succeed while earning your Utah State degree in the Uintah Basin. A variety of topics will be covered, personalized to your unique needs. Each session will be customized to address questions from people attending.

Potential topics include:

Admissions application process
Scholarships
Financial aid
Transferring credits
Student support resources
Majors and programs

Please register at: uintahbasin.usu.edu/blueprint

12:00 pm - 1:00 pm |
09
Sep

CCA's Midweek Music Series: “A Little Night Music"

Arts/Entertainment

An evening of wind and string music, including Eine Klein Nachtmusik (A Little Night Music), one of classical music’s most beloved works, along with Divertimento No. 2, KV 439b, for Three Basset Horns, performed for this program on two clarinets and bass clarinet.

Join us outdoors under the big tent on the Engineering Quad for a weekly concert brought to you by the Caine College of the Arts. In accordance with USU's policy on face coverings, masks are required for all events.

7:00 pm - 8:00 pm |
10
Sep

The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope

Exhibition

Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.

"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.

Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
10
Sep

Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction

Exhibition

During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
10
Sep

African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection

Exhibition

"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
11
Sep

The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope

Exhibition

Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.

"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.

Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.

10:00 am - 7:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
11
Sep

African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection

Exhibition

"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.

10:00 am - 7:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
11
Sep

Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction

Exhibition

During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.

10:00 am - 7:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
11
Sep

Getting It Together: Body, Mind, and Spirit Self-Care in Tough Times

Workshop/Training

We are living in a remarkable time. The pandemic has shaken people throughout the world, disrupting familiar routines and practices and creating chaos to one degree or another in our lives. Whether you have been working from home or lost employment, found your work environment or family gatherings altered by social distancing, become your children’s/grandchildren’s school-at-home teacher, been overwhelmed by the daily reporting of statistics, or become sick or cared for someone who has become sick, daily life now offers significant added challenges and worries. While we soldier on trying to adjust to the “new now,” it is important that we practice good self-care to manage the impact of the stressors on our bodies, minds, and spirits. This workshop will engage participants in ways to live in the present moment, be open to a variety of perspectives, develop awareness of one’s breath, experience the practice of the “beginner’s mind,” discover ways to find and release tension in the body, and explore their own embodiment as a way to confirm wholeness and well-being. Wear comfortable clothing that allows for ease of movement and be prepared to nurture your whole self!

12:00 pm - 1:30 pm | Online/Virtual |
11
Sep

Virtual Applied Math Seminar

Conference/Seminar

Understanding & Predicting Organic Pollutant Fate in Aquaculture-Modified Ecosystems Using a Multimedia Chemical Fate Model.

3:30 pm - 4:30 pm | Online/Virtual |
12
Sep

Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction

Exhibition

During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.

10:00 am - 3:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
12
Sep

African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection

Exhibition

"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.

10:00 am - 3:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
12
Sep

The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope

Exhibition

Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.

"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.

Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.

10:00 am - 3:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
13
Sep

Piano Duo Recital featuring Emily Ezola & Sara Chiesa

Arts/Entertainment

Professor Emily Ezola and former USU professor Sara Chiesa perform a socially-distanced two-piano concert.

1:00 pm - 2:00 pm | Online/Virtual |
15
Sep

African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection

Exhibition

"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
15
Sep

Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction

Exhibition

During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
15
Sep

The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope

Exhibition

Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.

"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.

Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
16
Sep

The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope

Exhibition

Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.

"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.

Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
16
Sep

Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction

Exhibition

During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
16
Sep

African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection

Exhibition

"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
16
Sep

CCA's Midweek Music Series: Emily Ezola & Braun Khan

Arts/Entertainment

Join us outdoors under the big tent on the Engineering Quad for a weekly concert brought to you by the Caine College of the Arts. In accordance with USU's policy on face coverings, masks are required for all events.

Professors Braun Khan and Emily Ezola will be performing the Andante, Op. 1 No. 1 by Sergei Koussevitsky. Along with being a double bass virtuoso, Koussevitsky was the music director of the Boston Symphony Orchestra from 1924 to 1949. The Andante is part of a collection of four short pieces for double bass that Koussevitsky composed and demonstrates the melodic capabilities of the bass.

7:00 pm - 8:00 pm |
17
Sep

The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope

Exhibition

Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.

"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.

Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
17
Sep

African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection

Exhibition

"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
17
Sep

Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction

Exhibition

During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
17
Sep

Voting Rights 1870, 1920, 1965, 2020 Symposium - Dr. Carol Anderson

Conference/Seminar | Year of the Woman

A Conversation with Dr. Carol Anderson (Emory University)
Author of "One Person, No Vote: How Voter Suppression is Destroying Our Democracy"
Moderated by Dr. Marisela Martinez-Cola

5:00 pm - 6:30 pm | Online/Virtual |
17
Sep

Tiny House Exhibition

Arts/Entertainment

This exhibit shows a comprehensive project between Architectural Graphics I + II and CADD I + II. The students are tasked with designing a small residence for two people. The residence must have more than one level, be built in Utah, and meet all residential building codes. Students begin their design by abstracting an object, which then develops into architecture. The students create presentation drawings, a three-dimensional model, set of construction documents, and interior and exterior renderings of their custom design.

From 9/17 at 9:00 pm to 9/25 at 5:00 pm | Chase Fine Arts Center, Tippetts and Eccles Galleries |
18
Sep

Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction

Exhibition

During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.

10:00 am - 7:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
18
Sep

The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope

Exhibition

Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.

"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.

Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.

10:00 am - 7:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
18
Sep

African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection

Exhibition

"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.

10:00 am - 7:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
18
Sep

Exploring the Intersectionality of Race & Gender

Panel Discussion/Presentation

Although 2020 will be known as the year of the global pandemic, it will also be recognized for years to come as the year of a dramatic shift in the discussion of race in America. This equality dialogue also builds on the ongoing discussion of women’s equity propelled by #MeToo movement in 2015. The Black Lives Matter and #MeToo movements have placed a spotlight on enduring racial and gender inequalities in the U.S. Both movements were launched by Black women who continue to call attention to the intersections between race and gender in shaping opportunity and justice in America. The purpose of this panel discussion is to explore these issues in the U.S. and Utah. Join us as we examine the lived experiences of women and girls of color and how they navigate politics, the workplace, education, and mental health services. The panel will also examine the roles of power and identity and how they contribute to the experience of marginalization and oppression for many women. Finally, we will turn to how we can all challenge race and gender norms, break stereotypes, empower each other, and learn to celebrate our similarities and differences. In addition, we will discuss how all of us can take action in ways that will respect and benefit everyone.

12:00 pm - 1:30 pm | Online/Virtual |
19
Sep

USU Tooele's Annual Blue Rock Run

Recreation

Everyone is invited to join local USU students, alumni, staff and the community for our annual 5K race. The race is a loop and will start at USU Tooele heading west towards Tooele Blvd., down to 700 South, then turning left on Coleman Street up Vine Street, finishing back USU Tooele.

Entry Fees:
July 27 - August 28: $10
August 29 - September 18: $15
September 19, Day of Race: $20

8:00 am - 12:00 pm |
19
Sep

African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection

Exhibition

"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.

10:00 am - 3:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
19
Sep

The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope

Exhibition

Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.

"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.

Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.

10:00 am - 3:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
19
Sep

Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction

Exhibition

During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.

10:00 am - 3:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
20
Sep

Reawakened - with Jamilyn Manning-White and Sara Chiesa

Arts/Entertainment

A vocal recital featuring Soprano, Jamilyn Manning-White and Pianist, Sara Chiesa.

1:00 pm - 2:00 pm | Online/Virtual |
21
Sep

ASCE Community Cleanup Competition

Student Activities

Join us in making a difference in our community! Take a picture of yourself picking up around your neighborhood and tag us @USUengineering #USUASCE by Friday, September 25th to win a prize!

Plastic bags & disposable gloves will be available to pick up in the clubs room, ENGR 332

PRIZES for: MOST trash collected, most CREATIVE photo & the photo that best represents your COMMUNITY

*Please, stay safe & socially distanced!

All Day |
22
Sep

ASCE Community Cleanup Competition

Student Activities

Join us in making a difference in our community! Take a picture of yourself picking up around your neighborhood and tag us @USUengineering #USUASCE by Friday, September 25th to win a prize!

Plastic bags & disposable gloves will be available to pick up in the clubs room, ENGR 332

PRIZES for: MOST trash collected, most CREATIVE photo & the photo that best represents your COMMUNITY

*Please, stay safe & socially distanced!

All Day |
22
Sep

Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction

Exhibition

During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
22
Sep

The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope

Exhibition

Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.

"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.

Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
22
Sep

African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection

Exhibition

"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
22
Sep

Getting It Together: Body, Mind, and Spirit Self-Care in Tough Times (For women in Carbon, Emery, and Grand counties.)

Workshop/Training

This event is only for women living in Carbon, Emery, and Grand counties.

We are living in a remarkable time. The pandemic has shaken people throughout the world, disrupting familiar routines and practices and creating chaos to one degree or another in our lives. Whether you have been working from home or lost employment, found your work environment or family gatherings altered by social distancing, become your children’s/grandchildren’s school-at-home teacher, been overwhelmed by the daily reporting of statistics, or become sick or cared for someone who has become sick, daily life now offers significant added challenges and worries. While we soldier on trying to adjust to the “new now,” it is important that we practice good self-care to manage the impact of the stressors on our bodies, minds, and spirits. This workshop will engage participants in ways to live in the present moment, be open to a variety of perspectives, develop awareness of one’s breath, experience the practice of the “beginner’s mind,” discover ways to find and release tension in the body, and explore their own embodiment as a way to confirm wholeness and well-being.

6:00 pm - 7:30 pm | Online/Virtual |
23
Sep

ASCE Community Cleanup Competition

Student Activities

Join us in making a difference in our community! Take a picture of yourself picking up around your neighborhood and tag us @USUengineering #USUASCE by Friday, September 25th to win a prize!

Plastic bags & disposable gloves will be available to pick up in the clubs room, ENGR 332

PRIZES for: MOST trash collected, most CREATIVE photo & the photo that best represents your COMMUNITY

*Please, stay safe & socially distanced!

All Day |
23
Sep

African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection

Exhibition

"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
23
Sep

The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope

Exhibition

Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.

"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.

Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
23
Sep

Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction

Exhibition

During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
23
Sep

CCA's Midweek Music Series: Wall-to-Wall Beethoven

Arts/Entertainment

Join the USU piano faculty and piano majors for some Beethovenian fireworks as we celebrate the legendary composer’s 250th birthday - outdoors!

Join us outdoors under the big tent on the Engineering Quad for a weekly concert brought to you by the Caine College of the Arts. In accordance with USU's policy on face coverings, masks are required for all events.

7:00 pm - 8:00 pm |
24
Sep

ASCE Community Cleanup Competition

Student Activities

Join us in making a difference in our community! Take a picture of yourself picking up around your neighborhood and tag us @USUengineering #USUASCE by Friday, September 25th to win a prize!

Plastic bags & disposable gloves will be available to pick up in the clubs room, ENGR 332

PRIZES for: MOST trash collected, most CREATIVE photo & the photo that best represents your COMMUNITY

*Please, stay safe & socially distanced!

All Day |
24
Sep

African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection

Exhibition

"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
24
Sep

The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope

Exhibition

Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.

"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.

Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
24
Sep

Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction

Exhibition

During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
24
Sep

Voting Rights 1870, 1920, 1965, 2020 Symposium - Dr. Lisa Tetrault

Conference/Seminar

Dr. Lisa Tetrault (Carnegie Mellon University)
When Women Women the Right to Vote: Myth & Memory
Moderated by Dr. Tammy Proctor

5:00 pm - 6:00 pm | Online/Virtual |
25
Sep

ASCE Community Cleanup Competition

Student Activities

Join us in making a difference in our community! Take a picture of yourself picking up around your neighborhood and tag us @USUengineering #USUASCE by Friday, September 25th to win a prize!

Plastic bags & disposable gloves will be available to pick up in the clubs room, ENGR 332

PRIZES for: MOST trash collected, most CREATIVE photo & the photo that best represents your COMMUNITY

*Please, stay safe & socially distanced!

All Day |
25
Sep

Science Unwrapped: Brave New World

Panel Discussion/Presentation | Science Unwrapped

Dr. Nick Flann from the Computer Science Department at Utah State University will present a talk about the spread of misinformation through social media. Join us for a virtual presentation at http://aggiecast.usu.edu/. A live Q&A with Dr. Flann will follow.

7:00 am - 8:00 pm |
25
Sep

Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction

Exhibition

During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.

10:00 am - 7:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
25
Sep

The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope

Exhibition

Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.

"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.

Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.

10:00 am - 7:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
25
Sep

African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection

Exhibition

"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.

10:00 am - 7:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
26
Sep

Celebrating Women Conference: Connect-Inspire-Thrive

Conference/Seminar | Year of the Woman

The Celebrating Women Conference is going VIRTUAL.

2020 marks the 3rd annual Celebrating Women Conference and we are back with another fantastic line-up. This event, held by the Davis County USU Extension, is designed to promote wellness and balance in women of all ages and stages of life and empower women to live their best lives. Our Keynote Speaker for 2020 is Gail Miller and she will present on the concepts “Connect. Inspire. Thrive.” Gail and the Miller family has created a strong legacy of enriching lives and giving back to the communities in which they do business.

Due to the ongoing pandemic, we have decided to bring wellness right into your home. We will live stream each speaker as well as record their presentation. This means unlike previous years; you will be able to see every single workshop!

Tickets and information are available at celebratingwomen2020.eventbrite.com or by calling 1-435-919-1321. Early registration is $8 per person through September 11.

9:00 am - 1:30 pm | Online/Virtual |
26
Sep

African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection

Exhibition

"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.

10:00 am - 3:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
26
Sep

The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope

Exhibition

Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.

"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.

Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.

10:00 am - 3:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
26
Sep

Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction

Exhibition

During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.

10:00 am - 3:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
26
Sep

Recovery Days- A Light to Remember

Special Event

Celebrate hope and remember those lost in a night of healing

• Drive along a luminary path
• Receive free Naloxone, gun locks, and community resource bags
• Share a photo/name on the memory wall and light a luminary for recovery
• Get a free food truck voucher and $5 of grub from Tooele's food trucks.

7:00 pm - 9:00 pm |
28
Sep

USU CAPS Aggies Stress Less on the Quad

Student Activities

With Fall semester starting, we at CAPS recognize that this can be a stressful time. Because of this, we are holding a special event this upcoming Monday that is centered around helping students identify ways to mitigate stress. Topics covered will be self-care, breathing exercises, yoga, mindfulness, stress-mangement, and more. We hope to see you there!

10:00 am - 2:00 pm | Quad |
29
Sep

Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction

Exhibition

During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
29
Sep

The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope

Exhibition

Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.

"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.

Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
29
Sep

African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection

Exhibition

"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
30
Sep

African American Art, Social Justice, and Identity: Works by Black Artists from the NEHMA Collection

Exhibition

"African American Art, Social Justice and Identity" addresses Black identity in the United States through works of art by ten African American artists and ephemera from collectives including the Black Panthers, spanning 1887-1989. Sourced from the NEHMA collection, these artworks provide compelling visual form to racism, discrimination, and inequality.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
30
Sep

The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope

Exhibition

Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. Curated amid pandemic and protests, "The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope" explores how artists respond to crisis, offering parallels to our own emotions and experiences this year.

"The Day After Tomorrow" is divided into three themes. "A Better Tomorrow" focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. "A Worse Yesterday" comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. "Awry Ecosystem" focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.

Also included is a Community Response Space, which will feature rotating exhibitions of work by local artists and where you can share your personal journey through an interactive display.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
30
Sep

Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction

Exhibition

During the 20th century, art made by women was often overlooked or dismissed by museums, collectors, and art historians. Featuring work by 46 artists, "Women, Surrealism, and Abstraction" attempts to present a more holistic and complex view of art history—one that highlights artwork by women pushing beyond societal expectations and creative limitations through Surrealism and abstraction. Also featured alongside the art are 16 poems written by women in the Cache Valley literary community.

10:00 am - 5:00 pm | Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art |
30
Sep

Nature's Best Hope with Doug Tallamy

Lecture/Readings | Gardening


Join Swaner Preserve and EcoCenter and Utah Humanities Book Festival for a virtual lecture and discussion with Douglas W. Tallamy, author of Nature's Best Hope; A New Approach to Conservation that Starts in Your Yard and professor and chair of the Department of Entomology and Wildlife Ecology at the University of Delaware.

Tallamy will discuss simple steps that each of us can- and must- take to reverse declining biodiversity and will explain why we, ourselves, are nature’s best hope.

This event is free and will take place via Zoom webinar. Visit swanerecocenter.org for more info.

5:30 pm - 7:00 pm | Online/Virtual |
30
Sep

CCA's Midweek Music Series: Jazz Jams

Arts/Entertainment

Join us outdoors under the big tent on the Engineering Quad for a weekly concert brought to you by the Caine College of the Arts. In accordance with USU's policy on face coverings, masks are required for all events.

7:00 pm - 8:00 pm |
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