Learn all about T rex and take a glimpse at what the Sedgwick Museum's collections team do to curate a new collection. On display are a 1/6 scale cast of a T rex skull along with other casts from our new donation. The display compliments our full-sized T rex skull cast already on display in the Museum.
Programme
Mendelssohn: Songs Without Words for piano
Clara Schumann: Three Romances for violin and piano, Op.22
Fanny Mendelssohn: Piano Trio in D minor, Op.11
Schumann: Piano Quartet in E flat major, Op.47
About the Kaleidoscope Chamber Collective
Tom Poster (piano) will be joined by Savitri Grier (violin), Juan-Miguel Hernandez (viola) and Laura van der Heijden (cello).
Exhibition Curator, Charlotte Connelly says, "For the communities who have lived in the Arctic for thousands of years, the polar regions are homely, while for European explorers first encounters with the far north felt bleak and difficult. These different perspectives are revealed through the art on display, which spans 200 years and artists from a range of backgrounds."
Opening Hours:
Tuesday - Saturday, 10-4.
Programme
Beethoven: Violin Sonata No.1, Op.12
Enescu: Impressions from Childhood
Beethoven: Violin Sonata No.9, ‘Kreutzer’
About Savitri Grier
Over the last year Savitri has returned to Wigmore Hall both as soloist, and with the IMS Prussia Cove Ensemble. She has toured throughout China, and collaborated with the renowned sarod players Amaan Ali and Ayaan Ali Bangash at The Times Swarsangam Music Festival in Bangalore.
Programme
Haydn: String Quartet Op.20 No.4
Elgar: String Quartet Op.83
Schubert: String Quartet No.15, D887
About the Piatti Quartet
Prizewinners at the 2015 Wigmore Hall International String Quartet Competition (formerly London), they have performed in all the major venues and festivals around the country as well as concerts throughout the world, with national broadcasts on BBC Radio, ABC (Australia), RTE (Ireland) and France Musique (France).
Programme
R Schumann: Humoreske Op.20
Thomas Adès: Darknesse Visible (1992); Three Mazurkas (2010)
Debussy: Voiles, Feuilles mortes, Feux d’artifice, La cathédrale engloutie, Les Collines d’Anacapri (from Préludes)
Rachmaninov: Sonata No.2, Op.36 (1931 version)
Most of these photographs were not intended as ‘artistic’ images as such, although many have strong aesthetic aspects. Rather, as so often with photographs, it is through accidental serendipity, that each highlights different layers of landscape in an effort to document the speed of change on the peninsula. The aim is to encourage visitors and inhabitants to look again, protect and cherish their shared heritage, monuments and environment.
A new temporary display at the University Museum of Zoology highlights historical depictions of both exotic and more familiar animals.
The ten books are on loan from the Department of Zoology’s Balfour and Newton Libraries here at the University of Cambridge, and each is open at a stunning illustration of one of the animals they describe.
This exhibition highlights Kun or Kunqu, one of the oldest forms of traditional Chinese Opera, through musical instruments associated with it and through creative responses by artists from the UK and China. More Than Music opens on the 16th October and runs until April 2019.
Tuesday – Saturday
10:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m.
Sunday
12.00 noon – 4:30 p.m.
Sometimes in archaeology we come across objects that truly intrigue us. The mysterious 11,500-year-old headdresses, found at the Mesolithic site of Star Carr in Yorkshire are just such an example. Made of deer skulls with antlers attached and holes bored into them, it is impossible not to look at the headdresses and wonder how they were worn and who wore them. Were they disguises for hunting, or perhaps elaborate costumes worn by Mesolithic shamans?