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lead dancer; Tamara Nadel, dancer; and Ashwini Ramaswamy, dancer.

Coordination of the tour is a joint effort of the Ohio Arts Council and the Ohio Arts Presenters Network. The tour is funded by the Ohio Arts Council's International Program, with support from local presenters.

RAGAMALA OHIO TOUR
COLUMBUS
November 29, 7:30 p.m.
Leo Yassenoff Jewish Community Center, 1125 College Avenue

CLEVELAND
December 1, Noon
Trinity Cathedral, 2021 East 22nd Street

TOLEDO AREA
December 3, 7:30 p.m.
Hindu Temple of Toledo, 4336 King Road, Sylvania

WARREN
December 5, 7 p.m.
Temple Beth Israel, 2138 East
Market Street

YOUNGSTOWN
December 6, 6 p.m.
First Unitarian Church of Youngstown, 1105 Elm Street

LANCASTER
December 7, 7 p.m.
Ohio University-Lancaster Campus, Wagner Auditorium, 1570 Granville Pike

PORTSMOUTH
December 9, 7 p.m.
Wesley United Methodist Church,
1415 Gallia Street

SPRINGFIELD
December 10, 7:30 p.m.
Central United Methodist Church,
102 West High Street

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  Very Special Arts Ohio is seeking entries for KeyBank's Accessible Expressions Ohio visual arts exhibition. Cash awards will be given for professional artist, emerging artist and youth artist. Artists with disabilities from throughout Ohio may submit slides or photographs of their work. Deadline is December 10. For more information call 614/241-5325 or email vsaoh@iwaynet.net.  

The Marie Walsh Sharpe Foundation offers 14 free studios in New York City. Visual artists 21 and older may submit proposals for workspaces. Applicants must be U.S. citizens or permanent U.S. residents, not in school at the time of residency. Studios are non-living spaces for making new works of art. Studios are available beginning September 1, 2000. Deadline for proposals is January 31, 2000. Call 719/635-3220 for guidelines or send an SASE to 711 North Tejon Street, Suite B, Colorado Springs, CO 80903.

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  Utopia and Alienation: German Art and Expressionism, 1900-1933 is on view at Oberlin College's Allen Memorial Art Museum through December 19. The exhibition examines formal and thematic issues that propelled a succession of expressionist movements in German art during the first turbulent decades of the 20th century. Key artists include Max Beckman, Lovis Corinth, George Grosz, Erich Heckel, Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Oscar Kokoschka, Kathe Kollwitz and Karl Schmidt-Rottluff. For more information call 440/775-8665.

The Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra's Chamber Players Series opens its 11th season November 12 at Memorial Hall in Cincinnati. The series of four concerts will spotlight the talents and versatility of musicians in the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra. For more information call 513/621-1919

An American Treasury: Master Quilts from the Museum of American Folk Art is on view at The Toledo Museum of Art through January 20, 2000. The exhibition covers the history of quilting in the United States from the earliest days to modern times. For more information call 419/255-8000 or visit www.toledomuseum.org

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Jacquelyn Quay, ABCDE/SPECTRA+ director at the Fitton Center for Creative Arts in Hamilton, is the new president-elect of the Ohio Alliance for Arts Education. Quay will become president of the state arts education advocacy organization October 1, 2000.

 

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  Transcending Traditions: Ohio Artists in Clay and Fiber opens in the Ohio Arts Council';s Riffe Gallery Thursday, November 4, with a reception from 5-7 p.m. Clay artists participating in the exhibition are George Bowes, Kristen Cliffel, Rebecca Harvey, Eva Kwong, Kirk Mangus and Kelly Palmer. Fiber artists in the exhibition are Dorothy Gill Barnes, Deborah Frazee Carlson, Nancy Crow, Jo Ann Giordano, the team of Susan Shie and James Acord, and Lilian Tyrrell. Admission is free. Vern Riffe Center, 77 South High Street, across from the Statehouse in Downtown Columbus. For more information or to schedule a tour call 614/644-9624.

 

  WE'RE BUILDING OHIO THROUGH THE ARTS
  The Ohio Arts Council, a state agency established in 1965, builds the state through the arts - economically, educationally and culturally - preserving the past, enhancing the present and enriching the future for all Ohioans. The Council believes the arts should be shared by the people of Ohio. The arts arise from public, individual and organizational efforts. The OAC supports and encourages those efforts.

 

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