BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
PRODID:iCalendar-Ruby
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture,Exhibit,Art
DESCRIPTION:Following the devastating 2020 wildfires in Oregon\, Sarah Grew
  collected black coals from the fires that she then used through extensive 
 research and experimentation\, to create carbon prints of recorded images o
 f the forests themselves. Her process and its resulting prints\, with their
  frilled edges and torn emulsion echo the way natural fire cycles can surmo
 unt devastation to provide nutrients to the soil\, force a pinecone to disp
 erse its seeds\, or shape the landscape\, in contrast to the extreme intens
 ity and size of the fires that are now common. The photographs show us the 
 beauty being lost to human negligence and the climate crisis. Printed as la
 ntern slides\, the forest memory is held captive on sheets of glass accentu
 ating both the fragility of life and our precarious position. Hung at vario
 us heights the viewer is invited to move through the Ghost Forest\, witness
 ing a range of natural elements. \n\n \n\nThe exhibition at the LaVerne Kra
 use Gallery will also include Jon Bellona’s sound installation Wildfire—a 4
 8-foot-long speaker array that plays back a wave of fire sounds at speeds o
 f actual wildfires. An instructor of audio production in the School of Musi
 c and Dance\, Bellona hopes the installation will allow viewers to embody t
 he devastating spread of wildfires through an auditory experience.\n\n \n\n
 Open hours: Mon–Fri\, 9 am–6 pm. Opening reception and panel discussion: “N
 ative Ecologies” on Indigenous histories and approaches to fire management\
 , knowledge production\, and ecological stewardship Tuesday\, April 25\, 4–
 6 pm. Closing reception and CSWS 2023 Acker-Morgen Memorial Lecture by invi
 ted scholar Michelle Murphy\, May 2\, 4:30-6:30 pm. \n\n \n\nSponsored by t
 he Center for the Study of Women in Society and the UO Environment Initiati
 ve.
DTEND:20230425T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260308T071725Z
DTSTART:20230424T160000Z
GEO:44.047367;-123.07431
LOCATION:Lawrence Hall\, LaVerne Krause Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:"Ghost Forest\," an exhibition by Sarah Grew\, featuring Jon Bellon
 a’s sound installation "Wildfire" 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_42581739684859
URL:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/ghost_forest_an_exhibition_by_sarah_
 grew_featuring_jon_bellonas_sound_installation_wildfire
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture,Exhibit,Art
DESCRIPTION:Following the devastating 2020 wildfires in Oregon\, Sarah Grew
  collected black coals from the fires that she then used through extensive 
 research and experimentation\, to create carbon prints of recorded images o
 f the forests themselves. Her process and its resulting prints\, with their
  frilled edges and torn emulsion echo the way natural fire cycles can surmo
 unt devastation to provide nutrients to the soil\, force a pinecone to disp
 erse its seeds\, or shape the landscape\, in contrast to the extreme intens
 ity and size of the fires that are now common. The photographs show us the 
 beauty being lost to human negligence and the climate crisis. Printed as la
 ntern slides\, the forest memory is held captive on sheets of glass accentu
 ating both the fragility of life and our precarious position. Hung at vario
 us heights the viewer is invited to move through the Ghost Forest\, witness
 ing a range of natural elements. \n\n \n\nThe exhibition at the LaVerne Kra
 use Gallery will also include Jon Bellona’s sound installation Wildfire—a 4
 8-foot-long speaker array that plays back a wave of fire sounds at speeds o
 f actual wildfires. An instructor of audio production in the School of Musi
 c and Dance\, Bellona hopes the installation will allow viewers to embody t
 he devastating spread of wildfires through an auditory experience.\n\n \n\n
 Open hours: Mon–Fri\, 9 am–6 pm. Opening reception and panel discussion: “N
 ative Ecologies” on Indigenous histories and approaches to fire management\
 , knowledge production\, and ecological stewardship Tuesday\, April 25\, 4–
 6 pm. Closing reception and CSWS 2023 Acker-Morgen Memorial Lecture by invi
 ted scholar Michelle Murphy\, May 2\, 4:30-6:30 pm. \n\n \n\nSponsored by t
 he Center for the Study of Women in Society and the UO Environment Initiati
 ve.
DTEND:20230426T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260308T071725Z
DTSTART:20230425T160000Z
GEO:44.047367;-123.07431
LOCATION:Lawrence Hall\, LaVerne Krause Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:"Ghost Forest\," an exhibition by Sarah Grew\, featuring Jon Bellon
 a’s sound installation "Wildfire" 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_42581739686908
URL:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/ghost_forest_an_exhibition_by_sarah_
 grew_featuring_jon_bellonas_sound_installation_wildfire
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture,Exhibit,Art
DESCRIPTION:Following the devastating 2020 wildfires in Oregon\, Sarah Grew
  collected black coals from the fires that she then used through extensive 
 research and experimentation\, to create carbon prints of recorded images o
 f the forests themselves. Her process and its resulting prints\, with their
  frilled edges and torn emulsion echo the way natural fire cycles can surmo
 unt devastation to provide nutrients to the soil\, force a pinecone to disp
 erse its seeds\, or shape the landscape\, in contrast to the extreme intens
 ity and size of the fires that are now common. The photographs show us the 
 beauty being lost to human negligence and the climate crisis. Printed as la
 ntern slides\, the forest memory is held captive on sheets of glass accentu
 ating both the fragility of life and our precarious position. Hung at vario
 us heights the viewer is invited to move through the Ghost Forest\, witness
 ing a range of natural elements. \n\n \n\nThe exhibition at the LaVerne Kra
 use Gallery will also include Jon Bellona’s sound installation Wildfire—a 4
 8-foot-long speaker array that plays back a wave of fire sounds at speeds o
 f actual wildfires. An instructor of audio production in the School of Musi
 c and Dance\, Bellona hopes the installation will allow viewers to embody t
 he devastating spread of wildfires through an auditory experience.\n\n \n\n
 Open hours: Mon–Fri\, 9 am–6 pm. Opening reception and panel discussion: “N
 ative Ecologies” on Indigenous histories and approaches to fire management\
 , knowledge production\, and ecological stewardship Tuesday\, April 25\, 4–
 6 pm. Closing reception and CSWS 2023 Acker-Morgen Memorial Lecture by invi
 ted scholar Michelle Murphy\, May 2\, 4:30-6:30 pm. \n\n \n\nSponsored by t
 he Center for the Study of Women in Society and the UO Environment Initiati
 ve.
DTEND:20230427T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260308T071725Z
DTSTART:20230426T160000Z
GEO:44.047367;-123.07431
LOCATION:Lawrence Hall\, LaVerne Krause Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:"Ghost Forest\," an exhibition by Sarah Grew\, featuring Jon Bellon
 a’s sound installation "Wildfire" 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_42581739688957
URL:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/ghost_forest_an_exhibition_by_sarah_
 grew_featuring_jon_bellonas_sound_installation_wildfire
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture,Exhibit,Art
DESCRIPTION:Following the devastating 2020 wildfires in Oregon\, Sarah Grew
  collected black coals from the fires that she then used through extensive 
 research and experimentation\, to create carbon prints of recorded images o
 f the forests themselves. Her process and its resulting prints\, with their
  frilled edges and torn emulsion echo the way natural fire cycles can surmo
 unt devastation to provide nutrients to the soil\, force a pinecone to disp
 erse its seeds\, or shape the landscape\, in contrast to the extreme intens
 ity and size of the fires that are now common. The photographs show us the 
 beauty being lost to human negligence and the climate crisis. Printed as la
 ntern slides\, the forest memory is held captive on sheets of glass accentu
 ating both the fragility of life and our precarious position. Hung at vario
 us heights the viewer is invited to move through the Ghost Forest\, witness
 ing a range of natural elements. \n\n \n\nThe exhibition at the LaVerne Kra
 use Gallery will also include Jon Bellona’s sound installation Wildfire—a 4
 8-foot-long speaker array that plays back a wave of fire sounds at speeds o
 f actual wildfires. An instructor of audio production in the School of Musi
 c and Dance\, Bellona hopes the installation will allow viewers to embody t
 he devastating spread of wildfires through an auditory experience.\n\n \n\n
 Open hours: Mon–Fri\, 9 am–6 pm. Opening reception and panel discussion: “N
 ative Ecologies” on Indigenous histories and approaches to fire management\
 , knowledge production\, and ecological stewardship Tuesday\, April 25\, 4–
 6 pm. Closing reception and CSWS 2023 Acker-Morgen Memorial Lecture by invi
 ted scholar Michelle Murphy\, May 2\, 4:30-6:30 pm. \n\n \n\nSponsored by t
 he Center for the Study of Women in Society and the UO Environment Initiati
 ve.
DTEND:20230428T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260308T071725Z
DTSTART:20230427T160000Z
GEO:44.047367;-123.07431
LOCATION:Lawrence Hall\, LaVerne Krause Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:"Ghost Forest\," an exhibition by Sarah Grew\, featuring Jon Bellon
 a’s sound installation "Wildfire" 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_42581739691006
URL:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/ghost_forest_an_exhibition_by_sarah_
 grew_featuring_jon_bellonas_sound_installation_wildfire
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture,Exhibit,Art
DESCRIPTION:Following the devastating 2020 wildfires in Oregon\, Sarah Grew
  collected black coals from the fires that she then used through extensive 
 research and experimentation\, to create carbon prints of recorded images o
 f the forests themselves. Her process and its resulting prints\, with their
  frilled edges and torn emulsion echo the way natural fire cycles can surmo
 unt devastation to provide nutrients to the soil\, force a pinecone to disp
 erse its seeds\, or shape the landscape\, in contrast to the extreme intens
 ity and size of the fires that are now common. The photographs show us the 
 beauty being lost to human negligence and the climate crisis. Printed as la
 ntern slides\, the forest memory is held captive on sheets of glass accentu
 ating both the fragility of life and our precarious position. Hung at vario
 us heights the viewer is invited to move through the Ghost Forest\, witness
 ing a range of natural elements. \n\n \n\nThe exhibition at the LaVerne Kra
 use Gallery will also include Jon Bellona’s sound installation Wildfire—a 4
 8-foot-long speaker array that plays back a wave of fire sounds at speeds o
 f actual wildfires. An instructor of audio production in the School of Musi
 c and Dance\, Bellona hopes the installation will allow viewers to embody t
 he devastating spread of wildfires through an auditory experience.\n\n \n\n
 Open hours: Mon–Fri\, 9 am–6 pm. Opening reception and panel discussion: “N
 ative Ecologies” on Indigenous histories and approaches to fire management\
 , knowledge production\, and ecological stewardship Tuesday\, April 25\, 4–
 6 pm. Closing reception and CSWS 2023 Acker-Morgen Memorial Lecture by invi
 ted scholar Michelle Murphy\, May 2\, 4:30-6:30 pm. \n\n \n\nSponsored by t
 he Center for the Study of Women in Society and the UO Environment Initiati
 ve.
DTEND:20230429T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260308T071725Z
DTSTART:20230428T160000Z
GEO:44.047367;-123.07431
LOCATION:Lawrence Hall\, LaVerne Krause Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:"Ghost Forest\," an exhibition by Sarah Grew\, featuring Jon Bellon
 a’s sound installation "Wildfire" 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_42581739693055
URL:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/ghost_forest_an_exhibition_by_sarah_
 grew_featuring_jon_bellonas_sound_installation_wildfire
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture,Exhibit,Art
DESCRIPTION:Following the devastating 2020 wildfires in Oregon\, Sarah Grew
  collected black coals from the fires that she then used through extensive 
 research and experimentation\, to create carbon prints of recorded images o
 f the forests themselves. Her process and its resulting prints\, with their
  frilled edges and torn emulsion echo the way natural fire cycles can surmo
 unt devastation to provide nutrients to the soil\, force a pinecone to disp
 erse its seeds\, or shape the landscape\, in contrast to the extreme intens
 ity and size of the fires that are now common. The photographs show us the 
 beauty being lost to human negligence and the climate crisis. Printed as la
 ntern slides\, the forest memory is held captive on sheets of glass accentu
 ating both the fragility of life and our precarious position. Hung at vario
 us heights the viewer is invited to move through the Ghost Forest\, witness
 ing a range of natural elements. \n\n \n\nThe exhibition at the LaVerne Kra
 use Gallery will also include Jon Bellona’s sound installation Wildfire—a 4
 8-foot-long speaker array that plays back a wave of fire sounds at speeds o
 f actual wildfires. An instructor of audio production in the School of Musi
 c and Dance\, Bellona hopes the installation will allow viewers to embody t
 he devastating spread of wildfires through an auditory experience.\n\n \n\n
 Open hours: Mon–Fri\, 9 am–6 pm. Opening reception and panel discussion: “N
 ative Ecologies” on Indigenous histories and approaches to fire management\
 , knowledge production\, and ecological stewardship Tuesday\, April 25\, 4–
 6 pm. Closing reception and CSWS 2023 Acker-Morgen Memorial Lecture by invi
 ted scholar Michelle Murphy\, May 2\, 4:30-6:30 pm. \n\n \n\nSponsored by t
 he Center for the Study of Women in Society and the UO Environment Initiati
 ve.
DTEND:20230502T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260308T071725Z
DTSTART:20230501T160000Z
GEO:44.047367;-123.07431
LOCATION:Lawrence Hall\, LaVerne Krause Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:"Ghost Forest\," an exhibition by Sarah Grew\, featuring Jon Bellon
 a’s sound installation "Wildfire" 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_42581739694080
URL:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/ghost_forest_an_exhibition_by_sarah_
 grew_featuring_jon_bellonas_sound_installation_wildfire
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture,Exhibit,Art
DESCRIPTION:Following the devastating 2020 wildfires in Oregon\, Sarah Grew
  collected black coals from the fires that she then used through extensive 
 research and experimentation\, to create carbon prints of recorded images o
 f the forests themselves. Her process and its resulting prints\, with their
  frilled edges and torn emulsion echo the way natural fire cycles can surmo
 unt devastation to provide nutrients to the soil\, force a pinecone to disp
 erse its seeds\, or shape the landscape\, in contrast to the extreme intens
 ity and size of the fires that are now common. The photographs show us the 
 beauty being lost to human negligence and the climate crisis. Printed as la
 ntern slides\, the forest memory is held captive on sheets of glass accentu
 ating both the fragility of life and our precarious position. Hung at vario
 us heights the viewer is invited to move through the Ghost Forest\, witness
 ing a range of natural elements. \n\n \n\nThe exhibition at the LaVerne Kra
 use Gallery will also include Jon Bellona’s sound installation Wildfire—a 4
 8-foot-long speaker array that plays back a wave of fire sounds at speeds o
 f actual wildfires. An instructor of audio production in the School of Musi
 c and Dance\, Bellona hopes the installation will allow viewers to embody t
 he devastating spread of wildfires through an auditory experience.\n\n \n\n
 Open hours: Mon–Fri\, 9 am–6 pm. Opening reception and panel discussion: “N
 ative Ecologies” on Indigenous histories and approaches to fire management\
 , knowledge production\, and ecological stewardship Tuesday\, April 25\, 4–
 6 pm. Closing reception and CSWS 2023 Acker-Morgen Memorial Lecture by invi
 ted scholar Michelle Murphy\, May 2\, 4:30-6:30 pm. \n\n \n\nSponsored by t
 he Center for the Study of Women in Society and the UO Environment Initiati
 ve.
DTEND:20230503T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260308T071725Z
DTSTART:20230502T160000Z
GEO:44.047367;-123.07431
LOCATION:Lawrence Hall\, LaVerne Krause Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:"Ghost Forest\," an exhibition by Sarah Grew\, featuring Jon Bellon
 a’s sound installation "Wildfire" 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_42581739696129
URL:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/ghost_forest_an_exhibition_by_sarah_
 grew_featuring_jon_bellonas_sound_installation_wildfire
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture,Exhibit,Art
DESCRIPTION:Following the devastating 2020 wildfires in Oregon\, Sarah Grew
  collected black coals from the fires that she then used through extensive 
 research and experimentation\, to create carbon prints of recorded images o
 f the forests themselves. Her process and its resulting prints\, with their
  frilled edges and torn emulsion echo the way natural fire cycles can surmo
 unt devastation to provide nutrients to the soil\, force a pinecone to disp
 erse its seeds\, or shape the landscape\, in contrast to the extreme intens
 ity and size of the fires that are now common. The photographs show us the 
 beauty being lost to human negligence and the climate crisis. Printed as la
 ntern slides\, the forest memory is held captive on sheets of glass accentu
 ating both the fragility of life and our precarious position. Hung at vario
 us heights the viewer is invited to move through the Ghost Forest\, witness
 ing a range of natural elements. \n\n \n\nThe exhibition at the LaVerne Kra
 use Gallery will also include Jon Bellona’s sound installation Wildfire—a 4
 8-foot-long speaker array that plays back a wave of fire sounds at speeds o
 f actual wildfires. An instructor of audio production in the School of Musi
 c and Dance\, Bellona hopes the installation will allow viewers to embody t
 he devastating spread of wildfires through an auditory experience.\n\n \n\n
 Open hours: Mon–Fri\, 9 am–6 pm. Opening reception and panel discussion: “N
 ative Ecologies” on Indigenous histories and approaches to fire management\
 , knowledge production\, and ecological stewardship Tuesday\, April 25\, 4–
 6 pm. Closing reception and CSWS 2023 Acker-Morgen Memorial Lecture by invi
 ted scholar Michelle Murphy\, May 2\, 4:30-6:30 pm. \n\n \n\nSponsored by t
 he Center for the Study of Women in Society and the UO Environment Initiati
 ve.
DTEND:20230504T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260308T071725Z
DTSTART:20230503T160000Z
GEO:44.047367;-123.07431
LOCATION:Lawrence Hall\, LaVerne Krause Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:"Ghost Forest\," an exhibition by Sarah Grew\, featuring Jon Bellon
 a’s sound installation "Wildfire" 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_42581739698178
URL:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/ghost_forest_an_exhibition_by_sarah_
 grew_featuring_jon_bellonas_sound_installation_wildfire
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Arts & Culture,Exhibit,Art
DESCRIPTION:Following the devastating 2020 wildfires in Oregon\, Sarah Grew
  collected black coals from the fires that she then used through extensive 
 research and experimentation\, to create carbon prints of recorded images o
 f the forests themselves. Her process and its resulting prints\, with their
  frilled edges and torn emulsion echo the way natural fire cycles can surmo
 unt devastation to provide nutrients to the soil\, force a pinecone to disp
 erse its seeds\, or shape the landscape\, in contrast to the extreme intens
 ity and size of the fires that are now common. The photographs show us the 
 beauty being lost to human negligence and the climate crisis. Printed as la
 ntern slides\, the forest memory is held captive on sheets of glass accentu
 ating both the fragility of life and our precarious position. Hung at vario
 us heights the viewer is invited to move through the Ghost Forest\, witness
 ing a range of natural elements. \n\n \n\nThe exhibition at the LaVerne Kra
 use Gallery will also include Jon Bellona’s sound installation Wildfire—a 4
 8-foot-long speaker array that plays back a wave of fire sounds at speeds o
 f actual wildfires. An instructor of audio production in the School of Musi
 c and Dance\, Bellona hopes the installation will allow viewers to embody t
 he devastating spread of wildfires through an auditory experience.\n\n \n\n
 Open hours: Mon–Fri\, 9 am–6 pm. Opening reception and panel discussion: “N
 ative Ecologies” on Indigenous histories and approaches to fire management\
 , knowledge production\, and ecological stewardship Tuesday\, April 25\, 4–
 6 pm. Closing reception and CSWS 2023 Acker-Morgen Memorial Lecture by invi
 ted scholar Michelle Murphy\, May 2\, 4:30-6:30 pm. \n\n \n\nSponsored by t
 he Center for the Study of Women in Society and the UO Environment Initiati
 ve.
DTEND:20230505T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260308T071725Z
DTSTART:20230504T160000Z
GEO:44.047367;-123.07431
LOCATION:Lawrence Hall\, LaVerne Krause Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:"Ghost Forest\," an exhibition by Sarah Grew\, featuring Jon Bellon
 a’s sound installation "Wildfire" 
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_42581739701251
URL:https://calendar.uoregon.edu/event/ghost_forest_an_exhibition_by_sarah_
 grew_featuring_jon_bellonas_sound_installation_wildfire
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
