BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
PRODID:iCalendar-Ruby
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:Savannah Flores and Marissa Cote meet at the intersection of ti
 me and material. Their craft-based practices take on similar points of inqu
 iry\, examining familial and systemic wounding throughout personal and soci
 al history and mapping generational knowledge\, change\, and possibility. B
 oth artists maintain a steadfast curiosity for how material-based practice 
 and object-making offer a poetic foundation for their work. The artists ent
 angle their work in a complex web of relations through binding\, piecing\, 
 wrapping\, knotting\, stitching\, weaving\, enmeshing\, and draping. Flores
  and Cote seek to understand where we have been through personal\, familial
 \, social\, and relational lenses to understand where we are and where we c
 an go from here.\n\nBiographies\nSavannah Flores (B.F.A. '25) is an artist 
 whose practice involves layering handmade paper\, silhouettes\, and archiva
 l images to express the enduring impact of settler colonialism and assimila
 tion on the individual and the collective. To disrupt these colonial struct
 ures\, Savannah represents bodies in migration\, speaking to and colliding 
 with colorful abstract worlds encompassing a hereditary past/present space.
  Savannah's work highlights the rawness of disrupted motherly relationships
  as an effect of these structures. Her work is a homage to mothers and gran
 dmothers who attempt to heal their wounds through their daughters' experien
 ces\, often mirroring the same pain they've experienced.\n\nMarissa Cote (M
 .F.A. '26) is an interdisciplinary artist invested in understanding systems
  and technologies of power and how they shape and misshape and reshape our 
 world and our love. She is a candidate for a Master of Fine Arts degree in 
 Creative Visual Arts at Cornell University.
DTSTAMP:20260312T040853Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250129
LOCATION:Bibliowicz Family Gallery\, Milstein Hall
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Marissa Cote and Savannah Flores: to woo\, to wane\, to bind\, to b
 ear
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_48725161429626
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/marissa-cote-and-savannah-flores-to-wo
 o-to-wane-to-bind-to-bear
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:Savannah Flores and Marissa Cote meet at the intersection of ti
 me and material. Their craft-based practices take on similar points of inqu
 iry\, examining familial and systemic wounding throughout personal and soci
 al history and mapping generational knowledge\, change\, and possibility. B
 oth artists maintain a steadfast curiosity for how material-based practice 
 and object-making offer a poetic foundation for their work. The artists ent
 angle their work in a complex web of relations through binding\, piecing\, 
 wrapping\, knotting\, stitching\, weaving\, enmeshing\, and draping. Flores
  and Cote seek to understand where we have been through personal\, familial
 \, social\, and relational lenses to understand where we are and where we c
 an go from here.\n\nBiographies\nSavannah Flores (B.F.A. '25) is an artist 
 whose practice involves layering handmade paper\, silhouettes\, and archiva
 l images to express the enduring impact of settler colonialism and assimila
 tion on the individual and the collective. To disrupt these colonial struct
 ures\, Savannah represents bodies in migration\, speaking to and colliding 
 with colorful abstract worlds encompassing a hereditary past/present space.
  Savannah's work highlights the rawness of disrupted motherly relationships
  as an effect of these structures. Her work is a homage to mothers and gran
 dmothers who attempt to heal their wounds through their daughters' experien
 ces\, often mirroring the same pain they've experienced.\n\nMarissa Cote (M
 .F.A. '26) is an interdisciplinary artist invested in understanding systems
  and technologies of power and how they shape and misshape and reshape our 
 world and our love. She is a candidate for a Master of Fine Arts degree in 
 Creative Visual Arts at Cornell University.
DTSTAMP:20260312T040853Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250130
LOCATION:Bibliowicz Family Gallery\, Milstein Hall
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Marissa Cote and Savannah Flores: to woo\, to wane\, to bind\, to b
 ear
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_48725161448060
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/marissa-cote-and-savannah-flores-to-wo
 o-to-wane-to-bind-to-bear
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:Savannah Flores and Marissa Cote meet at the intersection of ti
 me and material. Their craft-based practices take on similar points of inqu
 iry\, examining familial and systemic wounding throughout personal and soci
 al history and mapping generational knowledge\, change\, and possibility. B
 oth artists maintain a steadfast curiosity for how material-based practice 
 and object-making offer a poetic foundation for their work. The artists ent
 angle their work in a complex web of relations through binding\, piecing\, 
 wrapping\, knotting\, stitching\, weaving\, enmeshing\, and draping. Flores
  and Cote seek to understand where we have been through personal\, familial
 \, social\, and relational lenses to understand where we are and where we c
 an go from here.\n\nBiographies\nSavannah Flores (B.F.A. '25) is an artist 
 whose practice involves layering handmade paper\, silhouettes\, and archiva
 l images to express the enduring impact of settler colonialism and assimila
 tion on the individual and the collective. To disrupt these colonial struct
 ures\, Savannah represents bodies in migration\, speaking to and colliding 
 with colorful abstract worlds encompassing a hereditary past/present space.
  Savannah's work highlights the rawness of disrupted motherly relationships
  as an effect of these structures. Her work is a homage to mothers and gran
 dmothers who attempt to heal their wounds through their daughters' experien
 ces\, often mirroring the same pain they've experienced.\n\nMarissa Cote (M
 .F.A. '26) is an interdisciplinary artist invested in understanding systems
  and technologies of power and how they shape and misshape and reshape our 
 world and our love. She is a candidate for a Master of Fine Arts degree in 
 Creative Visual Arts at Cornell University.
DTSTAMP:20260312T040853Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250131
LOCATION:Bibliowicz Family Gallery\, Milstein Hall
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Marissa Cote and Savannah Flores: to woo\, to wane\, to bind\, to b
 ear
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_48725161466493
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/marissa-cote-and-savannah-flores-to-wo
 o-to-wane-to-bind-to-bear
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:Savannah Flores and Marissa Cote meet at the intersection of ti
 me and material. Their craft-based practices take on similar points of inqu
 iry\, examining familial and systemic wounding throughout personal and soci
 al history and mapping generational knowledge\, change\, and possibility. B
 oth artists maintain a steadfast curiosity for how material-based practice 
 and object-making offer a poetic foundation for their work. The artists ent
 angle their work in a complex web of relations through binding\, piecing\, 
 wrapping\, knotting\, stitching\, weaving\, enmeshing\, and draping. Flores
  and Cote seek to understand where we have been through personal\, familial
 \, social\, and relational lenses to understand where we are and where we c
 an go from here.\n\nBiographies\nSavannah Flores (B.F.A. '25) is an artist 
 whose practice involves layering handmade paper\, silhouettes\, and archiva
 l images to express the enduring impact of settler colonialism and assimila
 tion on the individual and the collective. To disrupt these colonial struct
 ures\, Savannah represents bodies in migration\, speaking to and colliding 
 with colorful abstract worlds encompassing a hereditary past/present space.
  Savannah's work highlights the rawness of disrupted motherly relationships
  as an effect of these structures. Her work is a homage to mothers and gran
 dmothers who attempt to heal their wounds through their daughters' experien
 ces\, often mirroring the same pain they've experienced.\n\nMarissa Cote (M
 .F.A. '26) is an interdisciplinary artist invested in understanding systems
  and technologies of power and how they shape and misshape and reshape our 
 world and our love. She is a candidate for a Master of Fine Arts degree in 
 Creative Visual Arts at Cornell University.
DTSTAMP:20260312T040853Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250201
LOCATION:Bibliowicz Family Gallery\, Milstein Hall
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Marissa Cote and Savannah Flores: to woo\, to wane\, to bind\, to b
 ear
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_48725161491070
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/marissa-cote-and-savannah-flores-to-wo
 o-to-wane-to-bind-to-bear
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:Savannah Flores and Marissa Cote meet at the intersection of ti
 me and material. Their craft-based practices take on similar points of inqu
 iry\, examining familial and systemic wounding throughout personal and soci
 al history and mapping generational knowledge\, change\, and possibility. B
 oth artists maintain a steadfast curiosity for how material-based practice 
 and object-making offer a poetic foundation for their work. The artists ent
 angle their work in a complex web of relations through binding\, piecing\, 
 wrapping\, knotting\, stitching\, weaving\, enmeshing\, and draping. Flores
  and Cote seek to understand where we have been through personal\, familial
 \, social\, and relational lenses to understand where we are and where we c
 an go from here.\n\nBiographies\nSavannah Flores (B.F.A. '25) is an artist 
 whose practice involves layering handmade paper\, silhouettes\, and archiva
 l images to express the enduring impact of settler colonialism and assimila
 tion on the individual and the collective. To disrupt these colonial struct
 ures\, Savannah represents bodies in migration\, speaking to and colliding 
 with colorful abstract worlds encompassing a hereditary past/present space.
  Savannah's work highlights the rawness of disrupted motherly relationships
  as an effect of these structures. Her work is a homage to mothers and gran
 dmothers who attempt to heal their wounds through their daughters' experien
 ces\, often mirroring the same pain they've experienced.\n\nMarissa Cote (M
 .F.A. '26) is an interdisciplinary artist invested in understanding systems
  and technologies of power and how they shape and misshape and reshape our 
 world and our love. She is a candidate for a Master of Fine Arts degree in 
 Creative Visual Arts at Cornell University.
DTSTAMP:20260312T040853Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250202
LOCATION:Bibliowicz Family Gallery\, Milstein Hall
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Marissa Cote and Savannah Flores: to woo\, to wane\, to bind\, to b
 ear
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_48725161523839
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/marissa-cote-and-savannah-flores-to-wo
 o-to-wane-to-bind-to-bear
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:Savannah Flores and Marissa Cote meet at the intersection of ti
 me and material. Their craft-based practices take on similar points of inqu
 iry\, examining familial and systemic wounding throughout personal and soci
 al history and mapping generational knowledge\, change\, and possibility. B
 oth artists maintain a steadfast curiosity for how material-based practice 
 and object-making offer a poetic foundation for their work. The artists ent
 angle their work in a complex web of relations through binding\, piecing\, 
 wrapping\, knotting\, stitching\, weaving\, enmeshing\, and draping. Flores
  and Cote seek to understand where we have been through personal\, familial
 \, social\, and relational lenses to understand where we are and where we c
 an go from here.\n\nBiographies\nSavannah Flores (B.F.A. '25) is an artist 
 whose practice involves layering handmade paper\, silhouettes\, and archiva
 l images to express the enduring impact of settler colonialism and assimila
 tion on the individual and the collective. To disrupt these colonial struct
 ures\, Savannah represents bodies in migration\, speaking to and colliding 
 with colorful abstract worlds encompassing a hereditary past/present space.
  Savannah's work highlights the rawness of disrupted motherly relationships
  as an effect of these structures. Her work is a homage to mothers and gran
 dmothers who attempt to heal their wounds through their daughters' experien
 ces\, often mirroring the same pain they've experienced.\n\nMarissa Cote (M
 .F.A. '26) is an interdisciplinary artist invested in understanding systems
  and technologies of power and how they shape and misshape and reshape our 
 world and our love. She is a candidate for a Master of Fine Arts degree in 
 Creative Visual Arts at Cornell University.
DTSTAMP:20260312T040853Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250203
LOCATION:Bibliowicz Family Gallery\, Milstein Hall
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Marissa Cote and Savannah Flores: to woo\, to wane\, to bind\, to b
 ear
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_48725161546368
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/marissa-cote-and-savannah-flores-to-wo
 o-to-wane-to-bind-to-bear
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:Savannah Flores and Marissa Cote meet at the intersection of ti
 me and material. Their craft-based practices take on similar points of inqu
 iry\, examining familial and systemic wounding throughout personal and soci
 al history and mapping generational knowledge\, change\, and possibility. B
 oth artists maintain a steadfast curiosity for how material-based practice 
 and object-making offer a poetic foundation for their work. The artists ent
 angle their work in a complex web of relations through binding\, piecing\, 
 wrapping\, knotting\, stitching\, weaving\, enmeshing\, and draping. Flores
  and Cote seek to understand where we have been through personal\, familial
 \, social\, and relational lenses to understand where we are and where we c
 an go from here.\n\nBiographies\nSavannah Flores (B.F.A. '25) is an artist 
 whose practice involves layering handmade paper\, silhouettes\, and archiva
 l images to express the enduring impact of settler colonialism and assimila
 tion on the individual and the collective. To disrupt these colonial struct
 ures\, Savannah represents bodies in migration\, speaking to and colliding 
 with colorful abstract worlds encompassing a hereditary past/present space.
  Savannah's work highlights the rawness of disrupted motherly relationships
  as an effect of these structures. Her work is a homage to mothers and gran
 dmothers who attempt to heal their wounds through their daughters' experien
 ces\, often mirroring the same pain they've experienced.\n\nMarissa Cote (M
 .F.A. '26) is an interdisciplinary artist invested in understanding systems
  and technologies of power and how they shape and misshape and reshape our 
 world and our love. She is a candidate for a Master of Fine Arts degree in 
 Creative Visual Arts at Cornell University.
DTSTAMP:20260312T040853Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250204
LOCATION:Bibliowicz Family Gallery\, Milstein Hall
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Marissa Cote and Savannah Flores: to woo\, to wane\, to bind\, to b
 ear
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_48725161568897
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/marissa-cote-and-savannah-flores-to-wo
 o-to-wane-to-bind-to-bear
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:Savannah Flores and Marissa Cote meet at the intersection of ti
 me and material. Their craft-based practices take on similar points of inqu
 iry\, examining familial and systemic wounding throughout personal and soci
 al history and mapping generational knowledge\, change\, and possibility. B
 oth artists maintain a steadfast curiosity for how material-based practice 
 and object-making offer a poetic foundation for their work. The artists ent
 angle their work in a complex web of relations through binding\, piecing\, 
 wrapping\, knotting\, stitching\, weaving\, enmeshing\, and draping. Flores
  and Cote seek to understand where we have been through personal\, familial
 \, social\, and relational lenses to understand where we are and where we c
 an go from here.\n\nBiographies\nSavannah Flores (B.F.A. '25) is an artist 
 whose practice involves layering handmade paper\, silhouettes\, and archiva
 l images to express the enduring impact of settler colonialism and assimila
 tion on the individual and the collective. To disrupt these colonial struct
 ures\, Savannah represents bodies in migration\, speaking to and colliding 
 with colorful abstract worlds encompassing a hereditary past/present space.
  Savannah's work highlights the rawness of disrupted motherly relationships
  as an effect of these structures. Her work is a homage to mothers and gran
 dmothers who attempt to heal their wounds through their daughters' experien
 ces\, often mirroring the same pain they've experienced.\n\nMarissa Cote (M
 .F.A. '26) is an interdisciplinary artist invested in understanding systems
  and technologies of power and how they shape and misshape and reshape our 
 world and our love. She is a candidate for a Master of Fine Arts degree in 
 Creative Visual Arts at Cornell University.
DTSTAMP:20260312T040853Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250205
LOCATION:Bibliowicz Family Gallery\, Milstein Hall
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Marissa Cote and Savannah Flores: to woo\, to wane\, to bind\, to b
 ear
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_48725161591426
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/marissa-cote-and-savannah-flores-to-wo
 o-to-wane-to-bind-to-bear
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:Savannah Flores and Marissa Cote meet at the intersection of ti
 me and material. Their craft-based practices take on similar points of inqu
 iry\, examining familial and systemic wounding throughout personal and soci
 al history and mapping generational knowledge\, change\, and possibility. B
 oth artists maintain a steadfast curiosity for how material-based practice 
 and object-making offer a poetic foundation for their work. The artists ent
 angle their work in a complex web of relations through binding\, piecing\, 
 wrapping\, knotting\, stitching\, weaving\, enmeshing\, and draping. Flores
  and Cote seek to understand where we have been through personal\, familial
 \, social\, and relational lenses to understand where we are and where we c
 an go from here.\n\nBiographies\nSavannah Flores (B.F.A. '25) is an artist 
 whose practice involves layering handmade paper\, silhouettes\, and archiva
 l images to express the enduring impact of settler colonialism and assimila
 tion on the individual and the collective. To disrupt these colonial struct
 ures\, Savannah represents bodies in migration\, speaking to and colliding 
 with colorful abstract worlds encompassing a hereditary past/present space.
  Savannah's work highlights the rawness of disrupted motherly relationships
  as an effect of these structures. Her work is a homage to mothers and gran
 dmothers who attempt to heal their wounds through their daughters' experien
 ces\, often mirroring the same pain they've experienced.\n\nMarissa Cote (M
 .F.A. '26) is an interdisciplinary artist invested in understanding systems
  and technologies of power and how they shape and misshape and reshape our 
 world and our love. She is a candidate for a Master of Fine Arts degree in 
 Creative Visual Arts at Cornell University.
DTSTAMP:20260312T040853Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250206
LOCATION:Bibliowicz Family Gallery\, Milstein Hall
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Marissa Cote and Savannah Flores: to woo\, to wane\, to bind\, to b
 ear
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_48725161612931
URL:https://events.cornell.edu/event/marissa-cote-and-savannah-flores-to-wo
 o-to-wane-to-bind-to-bear
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
