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Events

  • Hidden Meanings and Beyond in Chinese Painting

    China Institute

    What does a Chinese artist do in a time of chaos and oppression? Flee to the mountains, to the wilderness, of course, to cultivate upright Confucian values, write poetry, paint paintings, and, naturally, drink some tea and lots of wine. And in the paintings, he might hide some delicately rendered political commentary. But Arnold Chang, […]

    Free
  • Deeper Lecture Series: Ifa Bayeza

    Gibney Dance

    Playwright, novelis, director and educator Ifa Bayeza reads scenes from her work, drawing on the reconstruction of archives of the plantation and Archives of Black Survival.

    $5 – $20
  • Bird Walk at The Battery

    Explore the diversity of migrating birds that find food and habitat in The Battery. The walk will be led by Gabriel Willow, an educator from NYC Audubon. Gabriel is an experienced birder and naturalist, and is well-versed in the ecology and history of New York City. He has been leading walks for NYC Audubon for […]

    Free
  • Pieces of China: Wendy Paulson on the Spoon-billed Sandpiper

    China Institute

    Less than two months after hatching, the tiny Spoon-billed Sandpiper begins the long journey from Russia’s arctic tundra to the coast of China. No guide, no map, no GPS. But the baby birds instinctively know exactly where to go: to the mudflats of Jiangsu province. Unfortunately, industry and reclamation threaten the birds’ habitats. Spoon-billed Sandpipers […]

    Free
  • Navigating Workplace Transitions: How to Prepare for a Return to Office

    As organizations prepare to welcome people back to their physical locations, they must incorporate learnings from the past year. New ways of working have emerged, including fully distributed and hybrid digital-physical workplaces, offering new opportunities to support long-term individual and organizational thriving. Join Melissa Marsh, Founder and Executive Director of PLASTARC, a social research, workplace […]

    Free
  • Stories Survive: Manfred Ohrenstein

    Museum of Jewish Heritage

    Manfred Ohrenstein was born in Mannheim, Germany in 1925. He grew up under increasingly restrictive Nazi rules, holding his Bar Mitzvah at age 13 on the precipice of the Holocaust. In November 1938, less than a week before Kristallnacht, Ohrenstein and his family escaped Germany, made their way to London, and then found refuge in […]

    $10
  • Lower Manhattan’s Early American History Walking Tour

    African Burial Ground

    Celebrate National Park Week’s Wayback Wednesday with a virtual walking tour of lower Manhattan with park rangers! Virtual visitors, on each site’s social media, will start at Castle Clinton National Monument go to Federal Hall National Memorial and finish at the African Burial Ground Nation Monument with selected stops along the way that tell the […]

    Free
  • Seaport Fit Virtual Workouts

    Seaport District

    Fitness classes via Instagram released every Tuesday and Thursday, featuring Trooper Fitness, Pure Barre and Lyons Den Power Yoga.

    Free
  • Exploring Neuroscience And The Legacy Of The Holocaust

    Museum of Jewish Heritage

    Neuroscientist Dr. Daniela Schiller, who leads the Affective Neuroscience Lab at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, has spent years exploring “reconsolidation” — the biological process of rewriting painful memories. Her groundbreaking work is shaped by her personal experiences with her elderly father in Israel, who remains haunted by the Holocaust decades after he survived […]

    $10
  • KESTÉ PIZZA & VINO: Learn To Make Traditional and Gluten-Free Margherita Pizza, Montanara Pizza, and Tiramisù

    Virtual Event

    Support local restaurants and food-security charities from the comfort of your home with the Downtown Alliance’s ”Dine Around Downtown: Cooking At Home Edition,” a web series hosted by James Beard Award-winning chef and author Rocco DiSpirito.  Join Rocco as he chats with Executive Chef Roberto Caporuscio of Kesté Pizza & Vino. Chef Roberto will show […]

    Free
  • Valcour: The 1776 Campaign That Saved the Cause of Liberty

    Fraunces Tavern Museum

    During the summer of 1776, patriots worked frantically to head off a British invasion from Canada. Their effort culminated in a wild three-day naval battle on Lake Champlain in northern New York. In this lecture, Jack Kelly will argue that, although the campaign has often been neglected by historians, its success was an important impetus […]

    $5
  • This IS Women’s Work: Maritime Lives

    South Street Seaport Museum

    The Seaport Museum's Sea Songs and Sea Lives: Voices of the Many series continues as we explore the roles of diverse sailors and their treatment in traditional maritime songs. Join tugboat captain Ann Loeding and Harbor School graduate/SUNY Maritime student Ashley Cruz, along with chantey singer Bonnie Milner of the Johnson Girls, to discuss the […]

    Free