UW News

December 19, 2024

ArtSci Roundup: January 2025

From campus to wherever you call home, we welcome you to learn from and connect with the College of Arts & Sciences community through public events spanning the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social sciences. We hope to see you this January.


Featured: Global Connections


Week of January 6

January 9, 4:00 – 5:30 pm | (Jackson School)

Soccer offers at once a global language and a powerful crystallization of local and national community. Using a wide range of examples from the history of soccer, this talk reflects on how the sport both mirrors the world in which we live and offers us glimpses of other possibilities based on relation and solidarity across boundaries and borders.

Free


January 11, 2:00 – 2:45 pm | (Henry Art Gallery)

An engaging conversation with Senior Curator Nina Bozicnik and explore A.K. Burns鈥檚 latest exhibition, What is Perverse is Liquid. Learn more about the intersections of landscapes, human bodies, and water across the exhibition. Bozicnik will lead a guided tour through the exhibition, exploring themes of transformation, collectivity, and relationality.

Free


Additional Events

January 8 | (School of Music)
Through January 12 | (Burke Museum)


Week of January 13

January 15, 6:30 pm | Autopsy of an Election: What We Lost, What We Won, and How to Fight for the Future (Political Science & Law, Societies, and Justice)

The past year of political upheaval has thrust into the spotlight long-simmering debates about the vulnerable nature of democracy, the perils of money, and the malleability of the rule of law. Ahead of the presidential inauguration, Dr. Megan Ming Francis will reflect on the lessons of the 2024 election and point to possibilities to reimagine a more just future.

Free


January 16, 4:00 – 6:00 pm | (Gender, Women and Sexuality Studies)

In this lecture, Silky Shah frames US immigration policy and its relationship to mass incarceration. Incorporating historical and legal analyses of the last forty years, she shows how the prison-industrial complex and immigration enforcement are intertwined systems of repression.

Free


January 17 – 19 | (Dance)

Experience the dynamic synergy of youthful energy and seasoned artistry at the UW Dance Presents concert, which features new works by Dance faculty. This year鈥檚 program promises a rich tapestry of contemporary dance, mesmerizing techniques of video mapping, evocative play with light and shadow, whimsical characters that evoke childlike wonder, and the vibrant rhythms of Amapiano from South Africa.

Tickets for Purchase


Additional Events

January 14 | (Jackson School)

January 15 | (Psychology)

January 17 | (Political Science)


Week of January 20

January 20, 6:30 – 7:45 pm | (UW Public Lectures)

An evening of community-inspired music with the relentlessly innovative, bilingual, Chicano Grammy award-winning rock band Quetzal. Celebrate the life and work of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and usher in the next US Presidential administration with a band that narrates the social, cultural, and political stories of humanity.

Free


January 22, 6:30 – 7:30 pm |聽An Evening with Martha Gonzalez (GWSS PhD ’13) (UW Public Lectures)

Welcome back UW alumna (GWSS PhD, ’13), Chicana artivista, musician, feminist music theorist and Associate Professor in the Intercollegiate Department of Chicana/o Latina/o Studies at Scripps/Claremont College, Dr. Martha Gonzalez. Together take a lyrical journey filled with her creative ideas and thoughts on art as activism.

Free


January 22, 7:30 – 9:00 pm | (History)

Flowing more than 4,000 miles from the highland lakes of East Africa to the Mediterranean, the Nile is Africa鈥檚 longest river. Ancient Egyptians honored the river as a god, building temples along its banks and revering the animals nourished by its waters. This lecture examines how the Nile鈥檚 geography and ecology underpinned the development of Ancient Egypt.

Free


January 23 – 25, 8:00 pm | (Meany Center)

Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo returns with beloved gems from across its repertoire. Affectionately known as the Trocks, the all-male company dances en travesti with razor-sharp wit and breathtaking pointe work, performing polished parodies of pieces that span the classical ballet canon. Revered by ballet aficionados as well as by those who don鈥檛 know a pli茅 from a jet茅

Tickets for Purchase


Additional Events
January 21 | (School of Music)
January 22 | (Statistics)
January 24 | (Political Science)
January 25 | ONLINE OPTION (History)
January 26 | Sunday Reset (UW Alumni Association)

Week of January 27

January 27, 4:00 – 5:30 pm | (Simpson Center)

In this talk, Rana M. Jaleel considers Dobbs v. Jackson Women鈥檚 Health Organization鈥檚 failure to require a rape or incest exception in states that would otherwise ban or restrict access to abortions. The talk asks what queer/trans of color explorations of sex and value can contribute to the meanings of reproductive justice and global racial capitalism.

Free


January 29, 7:30 pm | (School of Music)

The School of Music presents a recital by pianist Gil Kalish, professor of music and head of performance activities at the State University of New York at Stony Brook. He performs works by J.S. Bach and Charles Ives, including Ives’s Sonata No. 1.

Free


January 31 & February 1, 7:30 pm | (Meany Center)Let your soul dance to the rhythm of life! Celebrating more than 40 years, Kod艒 鈥媟eturns to North America with One Earth Tour 2025: Warabe, a thrilling performance that revisits the ensemble鈥檚 early repertoire 鈥 lending simple forms of taiko expression that highlight its unique sound, resonance, and physicality.Tickets for Purchase


Additional Events

January 27 | (Jackson School)
January 30 | (Simpson Center)
Through February 2 | (Henry Art Gallery)


Have an event that you would like to see featured in the ArtSci Roundup? Connect with Kathrine Braseth (kbraseth@uw.edu).

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