Workers, labor activists, scholars, musicians, artists, filmmakers and writers will gather at Syracuse University April 22-24 to celebrate and explore art with a social conscience during the 2008 Ray Smith Symposium, "Artworks: The Role of the Arts in U.S. Workers' Struggles." SU's College of Arts and Sciences Humanities Council is presenting the symposium with support from the Gifford Foundation and in collaboration with the CNY Labor Federation, CNY Worker Justice Center, SEIU Local 119, SEIU 200 United and other grass-roots organizations. The symposium will include musical and dramatic performances, film showings, readings and panel discussions. All events are free and open to the public. A complete schedule is available on the Web
at http://artworks.syr.edu.
"The 2008 Ray Smith Symposium exemplifies SU's long-term commitment to developing richer and stronger relationships with a number of community organizations," says John Burdick, professor of anthropology in SU's College of Arts and Sciences and the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs. "It is our sincere hope that people from all over Central New York will be able to participate in all or some of these events and that we will all be enriched by what we see, hear and learn from our experiences."
Pre-symposium events
Art Works opening ceremony
"Working: A Celebration of Syracuse Workers in Words, Photography and Music" will be held Tuesday, April 22, from 7-9 p.m. in Maxwell Auditorium, Maxwell Hall. The event will feature music by Herrera; singer-song writer Tom Juravich, professor of labor studies and director of the Labor Center at the University of Massachusetts; and readings from "Working: An Anthology of Writing and Photography" (SU Press/New York City Community Press, 2008). The book is a collection of stories and photographs of daily life as told by workers who live in Syracuse. Their photographs and writings give testimony to the struggles workers face in the global economy.
Keynote event
The symposium keynote speaker is Esther Cohen, executive director of the New York City-based Bread and Roses workers' cultural project. She will present "A Visual History of Workers Lives," Wednesday, April 23, from 7-9 p.m. in the Physics Building, Stolkin Auditorium. The evening celebration will include musical performances.
Other symposium highlights:
The Ray Smith Symposium Series was established in 1989 as the result of a bequest from the estate of SU alumnus Ray W. Smith '21 to support symposia on topics in the humanities in SU's College of Arts and Sciences. Born in Auburn, Smith earned a bachelor's degree in chemistry at SU and a master's degree at Columbia University. He worked as a public school administrator in Central and Upstate New York and retired in Buffalo.