Carnegie Hall Announces Spring Family Day- A Journey To The Harlem Renaissance

By: Mar. 19, 2019
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Carnegie Hall Announces Spring Family Day- A Journey To The Harlem Renaissance

On Sunday, April 7 from 12-4 p.m., children and families will celebrate the Harlem Renaissance as part of Spring Family Day in Carnegie Hall's Resnick Education Wing. This musical open house, inspired by Carnegie Hall's citywide Migrations: The Making of America festival, includes all sorts of fun and free activities exploring how Harlem became a hub for African American artistic expression.

The day will be highlighted by interactive performances from Mwenso and the Shakes, and kids will also have the chance to build their own instruments, write and perform their own poetry, dance, sing, and create Harlem collages. Admission is granted on a first-come, first-served basis, and families are welcome to drop by for a visit or stay throughout the day for a musical adventure of their choice.

Spring Family Day Activities:

Welcome Center
Before participants start their journey, they can enjoy the elegant moves of Dancing Classrooms Youth Dance Company, who will perform dance steps popular during the Harlem Renaissance.

Josephine's Nightclub
Mwenso and the Shakes, a Harlem-based musical group, will honor the music of the Harlem Renaissance and explore works inspired by it. Participants will join these global musicians on a journey through the music of Harlem. From the Charleston to swing, participants will learn some basic steps famous during the Harlem Renaissance with Dancing Classrooms. After, they will incorporate those dances into the performance of Mwenso and the Shakes.

Duke's Music Studio
Participants will harness their imaginations and follow a jazz band on a journey through Harlem during its Renaissance. Through an interactive musical story, audience members will be immersed in the sounds of dance halls, jazz clubs, and more. Participants are encouraged to enhance the story with their own movements and voices!

Jacob's Art Space
Participants will create torn paper collages inspired by iconic Harlem artists Jacob Lawrence and Romare Bearden.

Louis' Instrument Workshop
Families will have the chance to build and perform on trombones and sandblocks from recycled materials in this hands-on activity with Bash the Trash. There will also be interactive performances by the Bash the Trash ensemble.

Langston's Writing Room
Participants will create poems inspired by the work of Langston Hughes and other poets, and then have a chance to perform their poetry in an informal poetry slam.
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About Migrations: The Making of America
Carnegie Hall's citywide festival Migrations: The Making of America traces how large-scale movements of people-both to and within our country-have helped shape American arts, culture, and society. The festival features over 100 events, with musical programming at Carnegie Hall and public programming, performances, exhibitions, and other events at more than 75 leading cultural and academic institutions across New York City and beyond.

At Carnegie Hall, festival concerts will examine the musical legacies of three migrations: the crossings from Scotland and Ireland during the 18th and 19th centuries, the immigration of Jews from Russia and Eastern Europe between 1881 and the National Origins Act of 1924, and the Great Migration-the exodus of African Americans from the South to the industrialized cities of the Northeast, Midwest, and West from 1917 into the 1970s. Events at festival partner organizations, ranging from music and dance to exhibitions, talks, and films, will further amplify the themes celebrated by Carnegie Hall as well as explore many other migrations from around the world-from elsewhere in Europe, Latin America, the Caribbean, and Asia as well as the internal migration of Native Americans-all of which have contributed to American culture today. Programming throughout the festival also focuses on New York City's history and identity as a city welcoming to immigrants, highlighting traditions and cross-cultural collaborations among the city's many diverse communities.

For more information, please visit: carnegiehall.org/Migrations


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