BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
PRODID:iCalendar-Ruby
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260220T220000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260220T140000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958414725
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260221T220000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260221T140000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958416774
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260222T220000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260222T140000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958418823
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260223T220000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260223T140000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119394182
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260224T220000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260224T140000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119395207
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260225T220000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260225T140000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119397256
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260226T220000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260226T140000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119398281
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260227T220000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260227T140000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958420872
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260228T220000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260228T140000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958422921
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260301T220000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260301T140000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958424970
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260302T220000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260302T140000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119400331
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260303T220000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260303T140000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119401356
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260304T220000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260304T140000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119402381
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260305T220000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260305T140000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119403406
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260306T220000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260306T140000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958428043
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260307T220000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260307T140000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145330932629
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260307T220000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260307T170000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958430092
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260308T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260308T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145330934678
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260309T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260308T180000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958432141
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260309T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260309T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119406480
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260310T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260310T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119407505
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260311T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260311T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119408530
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260312T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260312T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119409555
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260313T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260313T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958434190
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260314T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260314T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145330936727
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260314T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260314T160000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958437263
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260315T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260315T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145330939800
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260316T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260315T180000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958439312
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260316T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260316T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119412629
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260317T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260317T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119413654
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260318T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260318T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119414679
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260319T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260319T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119416728
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260320T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260320T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958441361
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260321T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260321T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145330942873
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260321T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114532Z
DTSTART:20260321T160000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958443410
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260322T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260322T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145330945946
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260323T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260322T180000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958446483
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260323T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260323T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119418778
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260324T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260324T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119419803
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260325T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260325T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119421852
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260326T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260326T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119422877
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260327T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260327T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958448532
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260328T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260328T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145330947995
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260328T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260328T160000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958451605
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260329T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260329T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145330950044
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260330T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260329T180000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958453654
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260330T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260330T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119424927
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260331T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260331T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119425952
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260401T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260401T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119428001
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260402T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260402T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119429026
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260403T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260403T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958455703
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260404T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260404T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145330952093
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260404T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260404T160000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958457752
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260405T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260405T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145330954142
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260406T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260405T180000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958459801
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260406T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260406T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119433124
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260407T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260407T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119435173
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260408T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260408T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119436198
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260409T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260409T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119438247
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260410T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260410T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958461850
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260411T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260411T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145330956191
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260411T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260411T160000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958463899
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260412T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260412T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145330958240
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260413T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260412T180000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958466972
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260413T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260413T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119440297
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260414T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260414T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119441322
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260415T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260415T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119442347
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260416T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260416T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119444396
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260417T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260417T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958469021
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260418T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260418T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145330960289
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260418T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260418T160000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958471070
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260419T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260419T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145330961314
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260420T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260419T180000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958474143
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260420T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260420T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119447470
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260421T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260421T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119449519
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260422T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260422T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119451568
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260423T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260423T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119452593
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260424T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260424T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958476192
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260425T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260425T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145330963363
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260425T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260425T160000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958479265
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260426T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260426T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145330965412
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260427T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260426T180000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958481314
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260427T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260427T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119454643
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260428T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260428T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119455668
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260429T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260429T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119457717
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260430T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260430T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119458742
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260501T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260501T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958483363
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260502T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260502T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145330967461
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260502T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260502T160000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958485412
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260503T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260503T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145330969510
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260504T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260503T180000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958489509
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260504T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260504T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119460792
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260505T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260505T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119461817
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260506T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260506T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119462842
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260507T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260507T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119463867
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260508T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260508T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958492582
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260509T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260509T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145330975655
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260509T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260509T160000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958495655
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260510T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260510T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145330978728
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260511T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260510T180000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958499752
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260511T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260511T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119466941
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260512T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260512T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119467966
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260513T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260513T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119468991
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260514T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260514T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119471040
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260515T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260515T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958503849
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260516T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260516T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145330981801
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260516T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260516T160000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958505898
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260517T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260517T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145330984874
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260518T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260517T180000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958508971
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260518T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260518T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119474114
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260519T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260519T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119475139
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260520T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260520T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119477188
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260521T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260521T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119478213
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260522T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260522T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958512044
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260523T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260523T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145330987947
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260523T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260523T160000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958515117
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260524T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260524T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145330991020
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260525T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260524T180000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958519214
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260525T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260525T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119481287
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260526T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260526T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119482312
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260527T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260527T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119484361
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260528T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260528T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119485386
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260529T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260529T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958531503
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260530T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114533Z
DTSTART:20260530T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145330993069
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260530T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260530T160000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958533552
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260531T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260531T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145330995118
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260601T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260531T180000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958536625
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260601T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260601T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119487436
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260602T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260602T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119488461
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260603T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260603T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119490510
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260604T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260604T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119491535
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260605T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260605T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958539698
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260606T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260606T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145330997167
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260606T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260606T160000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958541747
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260607T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260607T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145330999216
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260608T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260607T180000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958543796
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260608T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260608T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119494609
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260609T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260609T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119495634
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260610T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260610T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119496659
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260611T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260611T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119497684
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260612T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260612T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958545845
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260613T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260613T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145331001265
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260613T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260613T160000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958547894
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260614T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260614T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145331003314
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260615T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260614T180000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958550967
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260615T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260615T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119500758
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260616T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260616T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119501783
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260617T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260617T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119503832
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260618T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260618T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119505881
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260619T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260619T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958553016
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260620T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260620T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145331005363
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260620T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260620T160000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958555065
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260621T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260621T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145331007412
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260622T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260621T180000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958558138
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260622T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260622T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119507931
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260623T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260623T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119508956
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260624T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260624T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119509981
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260625T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260625T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119511006
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260626T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260626T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958560187
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260627T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260627T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145331010485
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260627T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260627T160000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958562236
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260628T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260628T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145331013558
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260629T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260628T180000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958565309
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260629T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260629T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119514080
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260630T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260630T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119515105
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260701T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260701T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119517154
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260702T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260702T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119519203
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260703T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260703T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958567358
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260704T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260704T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145331015607
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260704T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260704T160000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958569407
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260705T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260705T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145331018680
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260706T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260705T180000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958571456
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260706T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260706T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119522277
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260707T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260707T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119523302
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260708T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260708T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119525351
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260709T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260709T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119526376
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260710T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260710T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958574529
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260711T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260711T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145331021753
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260711T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260711T160000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958576578
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260712T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260712T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145331024826
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260713T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260712T180000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958578627
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260713T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260713T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119528426
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260714T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260714T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119530475
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260715T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260715T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119531500
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260716T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260716T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119533549
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260717T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260717T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958580676
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260718T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260718T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145331027899
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260718T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260718T160000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958583749
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260719T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260719T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145331029948
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260720T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260719T180000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958585798
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260720T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260720T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119536623
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260721T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260721T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119537648
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260722T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260722T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119538673
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260723T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260723T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119540722
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260724T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260724T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958587847
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260725T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260725T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145331033021
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260725T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260725T160000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958590920
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260726T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260726T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145331035070
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260727T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260726T180000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958593993
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260727T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260727T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119542772
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260728T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260728T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119543797
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260729T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260729T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119545846
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260730T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260730T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119546871
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260731T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260731T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958597066
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260801T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260801T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145331038143
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260801T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114534Z
DTSTART:20260801T160000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958599115
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260802T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260802T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145331040192
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260803T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260802T180000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958601164
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260803T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260803T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119548921
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260804T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260804T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119549946
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260805T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260805T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119550971
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260806T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260806T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119551996
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260807T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260807T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958603213
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260808T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260808T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145331042241
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260808T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260808T160000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958606286
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260809T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260809T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145331044290
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260810T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260809T180000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958608335
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260810T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260810T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119554046
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260811T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260811T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119556095
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260812T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260812T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119556096
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260813T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260813T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119558145
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260814T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260814T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958610384
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260815T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260815T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145331047363
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260815T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260815T160000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958612433
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260816T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260816T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145331049412
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260817T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260816T180000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958615506
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260817T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260817T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119561219
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260818T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260818T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119562244
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260819T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260819T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119563269
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260820T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260820T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119564294
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260821T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260821T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958617555
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260822T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260822T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145331051461
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260822T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260822T160000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958620628
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260823T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260823T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52145331053510
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260824T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260823T180000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958623701
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260824T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260824T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119566344
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260825T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260825T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119567369
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260826T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260826T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119568394
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260827T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260827T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51888119569419
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit,Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The devastation of the natural world through climate change\, p
 ollution\, urban sprawl\, and the accelerating extinction of plant and anim
 al species has prompted a wave of urgent musical responses in recent years.
  \n\nMusic of the Natural World: Cornell Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, an
 d Climate features scores\, videos\, and sound recordings of works inspired
  by endangered creatures and fragile habitats. The exhibit showcases music 
 by current and former Cornell students and faculty\, including the elegiac 
 orchestral work Silent Spring (2011)\, by the late Pulitzer Prize winner an
 d Cornell faculty member Steven Stucky\; and High Water Rising for Wind Ens
 emble (2017)\, by local composer and Cornell alumna Sally Lamb McCune\, whi
 ch depicts the threat of rising sea levels. \n\nThe exhibit will also featu
 re sound installations by student composers\, beginning with Grayspace by J
 ames Parker\, a graduate student in the Department of Music. Running from F
 ebruary 20 through March 20\, Grayspace invites visitors to create their ow
 n sonic landscape. As they move through the library space with headphones a
 nd handheld radios\, participants can discover and combine musical and envi
 ronmental sounds for a uniquely immersive auditory journey.\n\nThe opening 
 of this exhibit will be celebrated with a reception and remarks on Friday\,
  February 20\, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the Sidney Cox Library of Music and Danc
 e\, 2nd floor. \n\nMore information about Music of the Natural World: Corne
 ll Composers on Nature\, Ecology\, and Climate is available here. This exhi
 bit is part of a series of exhibits titled "From the Brink: Contributions t
 o a Sustainable Future from across Cornell\," hosted by different libraries
  across Cornell University Library in close partnership with other departme
 nts and groups on campus.\n\n"From the Brink" showcases collections\, resea
 rch support\, and collaborative efforts across Cornell and illuminates ways
  of addressing issues of critical\, global importance. This series of exhib
 its aims to stimulate conversations about the threat of environmental and c
 ultural loss and its implications\, while also offering insights about posi
 tive developments and constructive steps toward a healthier future for our 
 planet and our communities.\n\nMusic of the Natural World is open to the pu
 blic all hours the library is open.
DTEND:20260828T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260416T114535Z
DTSTART:20260828T130000Z
LOCATION:Sidney Cox Library of Music and Dance
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Music of the Natural World
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51905958625750
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/exhibit-music-of-the-natural-world
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
