BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
PRODID:iCalendar-Ruby
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260220T040000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113334Z
DTSTART:20260220T010000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997596627
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260221T040000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113334Z
DTSTART:20260221T010000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997597652
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260222T040000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113334Z
DTSTART:20260222T010000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997598677
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260227T040000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113334Z
DTSTART:20260227T010000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997599702
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260228T040000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113334Z
DTSTART:20260228T010000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997600727
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260301T040000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113334Z
DTSTART:20260301T010000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997601752
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260306T040000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113334Z
DTSTART:20260306T010000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997602777
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260307T040000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113334Z
DTSTART:20260307T010000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997604826
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260308T040000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113334Z
DTSTART:20260308T010000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997605851
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260313T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113334Z
DTSTART:20260313T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997606876
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260314T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113334Z
DTSTART:20260314T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997607901
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260315T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113334Z
DTSTART:20260315T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997608926
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260320T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113334Z
DTSTART:20260320T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997609951
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260321T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113334Z
DTSTART:20260321T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997610976
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260322T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113334Z
DTSTART:20260322T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997612001
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260327T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113334Z
DTSTART:20260327T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997613026
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260328T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113334Z
DTSTART:20260328T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997614051
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260329T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113334Z
DTSTART:20260329T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997615076
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260403T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113334Z
DTSTART:20260403T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997617125
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260404T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113334Z
DTSTART:20260404T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997618150
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260405T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113334Z
DTSTART:20260405T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997619175
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260410T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113334Z
DTSTART:20260410T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997620200
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260411T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113334Z
DTSTART:20260411T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997621225
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260412T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113334Z
DTSTART:20260412T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997622250
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260417T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113334Z
DTSTART:20260417T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997623275
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260418T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113335Z
DTSTART:20260418T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997624300
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260419T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113335Z
DTSTART:20260419T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997625325
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260424T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113335Z
DTSTART:20260424T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997626350
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260425T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113335Z
DTSTART:20260425T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997627375
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260426T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113335Z
DTSTART:20260426T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997628400
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260501T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113335Z
DTSTART:20260501T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997630449
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260502T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113335Z
DTSTART:20260502T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997631474
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260503T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113335Z
DTSTART:20260503T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997632499
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260508T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113335Z
DTSTART:20260508T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997633524
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260509T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113335Z
DTSTART:20260509T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997634549
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260510T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113335Z
DTSTART:20260510T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997635574
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260515T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113335Z
DTSTART:20260515T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997637623
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260516T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113335Z
DTSTART:20260516T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997638648
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260517T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113335Z
DTSTART:20260517T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997639673
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260522T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113335Z
DTSTART:20260522T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997641722
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260523T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113335Z
DTSTART:20260523T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997643771
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260524T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113335Z
DTSTART:20260524T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997645820
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260529T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113335Z
DTSTART:20260529T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997646845
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260530T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113335Z
DTSTART:20260530T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997647870
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Concerts, Films and Performances
DESCRIPTION:Light Work’s Urban Video Project is pleased to present the exhi
 bition Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival  at their architectura
 l projection venue on the Everson Museum facade..\n\nThe Temple of Our Surv
 ival is new video work commissioned by Light Work for projection at UVP exp
 loring what survival means and looks like through a series of interviews co
 nducted by the artist with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultura
 l workers in her nomadic film set and project space.\n\nIn conjunction with
  the exhibition\, Wormsley will be present for a special indoor film screen
 ing and panel talk on Thursday\, March 19.\n\n \n\nAbout the Work\n\nThe Te
 mple of Our Survival\n2026\n\nWhile in-residence in Syracuse\, Wormsley wor
 ked with Sankofa Reproductive Health and Healing Center\, setting up her ep
 onymous traveling film set and workshop space “The Temple of Our Survival” 
 for the month of July. A work of art in its own right\, the Temple is a mas
 sive tent draped in quilts made of vibrant traditional fabrics and sewn by 
 the artist in designs invoking her own ancestral histories of migration and
  search for refuge.\n\nIn Wormsley’s own words\, “This set is mobile not ju
 st for convenience but as a signifier of our relationship to land and lands
 cape. That relationship is migrant. Ancestrally adapting to weather\, plant
 -life\, water and resources in every part of this country and beyond. The r
 esilience is of the spirit.”\n\nThe Temple of Our Survival filmset has trav
 elled to a total of eight sites around the country. At each of these\, the 
 artist held workshops using herbs grown in her grandmother’s garden and con
 ducted interviews with local care workers\, land stewards\, and cultural wo
 rkers\, each of whom shared their own stories of and strategies for surviva
 l. \n\n \n\nAbout the Artist\n\nAlisha B Wormsley is an interdisciplinary a
 rtist and cultural producer. Her main concern is to transform the world int
 o a place where people can live. Her work has been shown at REDCAT in Los A
 ngeles\, Participant\, INC\, Cue Arts\, and the Bronx Museum in NYC\, and a
 t the Andy Warhol Museum and Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh\, among many ot
 her venues. In 2020\, Wormsley launched an artist residency for Black artis
 ts who M/other called Sibyls Shrine that supports over 150 artists. Wormsle
 y is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts and an Assistant Professor of So
 cial Practice at Carnegie Mellon School of Art.\n\nIn addition to being awa
 rded a UVP Residential Commission\, this project has won an Anonymous was a
  Woman NYFA Award\, a Pittsburgh Foundation grant and the Sundance Interdis
 ciplinary grant.\n\nArtist’s website: www.alishabwormsley.com\n\nSponsors\n
 \nAll Light Work exhibitions are made possible by the New York State Counci
 l on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New Yo
 rk State Legislature and through a Tier Two Support Grant from the County o
 f Onondaga\, with the support of County Executive Ryan McMahon and the Onon
 daga County Legislature\, administered by CNY Arts.
DTEND:20260531T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T113335Z
DTSTART:20260531T000000Z
GEO:43.044718;-76.146748
LOCATION:Everson Museum of Art\, Plaza
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Alisha B Wormsley: The Temple of Our Survival
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52213997649919
URL:https://events.syracuse.edu/event/alisha-b-wormsley-the-temple-of-our-s
 urvival
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
