Latest Past Events

Small Press Reading Series: Kofi Antwi

Salt City Market Commnity Room 484 S. Salina St., Syracuse

Kofi Antwi, author of "Tidal Wave" (Kattywompus Press, 2020), will share personal work and lead a generative writing workshop for adults and young people. Contact Patrick Williams for more more information.

Syracuse Symposium: Historical Conventions – How We Got Where We Are

CFAC Galleries 805 E. Genesee St., Syracuse

Part one will be a discussion that explores how historical conventions have brought Syracuse to its current housing issues. Presenters will guide participants through the history of how individuals living in Syracuse’s 15th Ward have been impacted by redlining, federal policies on “urban renewal” and unwritten rules on housing discrimination. Balancing first-person accounts with expert historical and legal background, this discussion will share the stories of Syracuse neighborhoods thriving in spite of implicit segregation, resistance to their destruction in the name of economic development and the dispersal of community homes to make way for I-81.

‘Libba Cotten: Here This Day’

Tucker Missionary Baptist Church 515 Oakwood Avenue, Syracuse

A fully-staged premiere of a Society for New Music's commissioned opera with a 10-piece chamber ensemble and music by Mark Olivieri and libretto by Kyle Bass will premiere Oct. 17 at Tucker Missionary Baptist Church.

Born in the segregated south, Libba Cotten was a singer/songwriter whose "Freight Train," written when she was 11, is still performed by internationally-renowned artists today. Married at 15, Libba was "discovered" at age 60 by the folk music world. She spent the last 20 years of her life in Syracuse, during which time she toured nationally and performed regularly at the now STEAM at Dr. King Elementary School. She was declared the first "living treasure" of Syracuse and won a Grammy at 93.

Tickets for this special opera performance are $20 regular, $15 seniors/students and free for ages 18 and younger.