free things to do in New York City
Free events for Thursday, 01/11/24
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Free Events, Free Things to Do in New York City!  Read More

Are you looking for free things to do in New York City (NYC) on January 11, 2024?

39 free events take place on Thursday, January 11 in New York City. Don't miss the opportunities that only New York provides! Exciting, high quality, unique and off the beaten path free events and free things to do take place in New York today, tonight, tomorrow and each day of the year, any time of the day: whether it's a weekday or a weekend, day or night, morning or evening or afternoon, December or July, April or November! These events will take your breath away!

New York City (NYC) never ceases to amaze you with quantity and quality of its free culture and free entertainment. Check out January 11 and see for yourself. Summer or Winter, Spring or Fall! Just click on any day of the calendar above and you'll find most inspiring and entertaining free events to go to and free things to do on each day of January . Don't miss the opportunities that only New York provides!

Some events take place all year long: same day of the week, same time there are there for you to take advantage of. One of the oldest free weekly events in Manhattan is Dixieland Jazz with the Gotham Jazzmen, which happen at noon every Tuesday. Another example of an event that you can attend all year round on weekdays is Federal Reserve Bank Tour, which takes place every week day at 1 pm (but advanced reservations are required). You can take at least 13 free tours every day of the year, except the New Year Day, July 4th, and the Christmas Day. If you are classical music afficionado, you can spend whole day in New York going from one free classical concert to another. If you love theater, then New York gives you an option to attend plays and musicals free of charge, or at deep discount. You just need to have information about it. And we are here to make that information available to you.
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The quality and quantity of
free events,
free things to do
that happen in New York City
every day of the year
is truly amazing.

So don't miss the opportunities
that only New York provides:
stop wondering what to do;
start taking advantage of
free events to go to,
free things to do in NYC
today!

39 free things to do in New York City (NYC) on Thursday, January 11, 2024

All events are free unless otherwise noted.
        

Tour | 13 Tours, All City Neighborhoods, Any Time Of The Day, Choose One Tour Or Many


These free tours take place at various times during the day, all day long. You can make reservations for as many tours as your schedule allows. SoHo, Little Italy and Chinatown Brooklyn Bridge, Brooklyn Heights + DUMBO 3 Hour Lower Manhattan Harlem Chelsea and the High Line 6 Hour Downtown Combined Greenwich Village Central Park Lower Manhattan Midtown Manhattan Grand Central Terminal Graffiti and Street Art Tours World Trade Center
   New York City, NY; NYC
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10:00 am
Free

Tour | Tour of New York City Hall


One of the oldest continuously used City Halls in the nation that still houses its original governmental functions, New York's City Hall is considered one of the finest architectural achievements of its period. Constructed from 1803 to 1812, the building was an early expression of the City's cosmopolitanism. City Hall is a designated New York City landmark, and its rotunda is a designated interior landmark as well.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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10:00 am
Free

Film | Penny Serenade (1941) with Irene Dunne and Cary Grant


Since marrying Roger Adams, Julie has wanted to start a family. An accident while she's visiting Japan causes a miscarriage and makes Julie incapable of having children. After they adopt a little girl, Trina, Roger's small newspaper folds, and the couple has to fight in court to keep her. Even though they succeed, another tragedy strikes out of nowhere. The Adams' marriage looks headed for divorce, unless something brings them close again. Director: George Stevens Cast: Irene Dunne, Cary Grant Irene Dunne was an American actress who appeared in films during the Golden Age of Hollywood. She is best known for her comedic roles, though she performed in films of other genres. She performed in musicals on Broadway until she made her Hollywood film debut in the musical Leathernecking (1930). She later starred in the successful musical Show Boat (1936). Overall, she starred in 42 movies and was nominated five times for the Academy Award for Best Actress. Cary Grant was an English-American actor. He was known for his Mid-Atlantic accent, debonair demeanor, light-hearted approach to acting, and sense of comedic timing. He was one of classic Hollywood's definitive leading men. He was nominated twice for the Academy Award, was honored with an Academy Honorary Award in 1970, and received the Kennedy Center Honor in 1981. He was named the second greatest male star of the Golden Age of Hollywood by the American Film Institute in 1999.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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11:00 am
Free

Talk | Meet Me in the Kitchen: Making Healthy Choices


Nutritionist Lauren C. Kelly offers creative twists on classic recipes, food prep and cooking trends. From appetizers, to entrees, to dessert, learn how to design menus using helpful tips and current research findings for better health and eating.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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11:00 am
Free

Classical Music | Bach at Noon (In Person and Online)


Take a momentary respite from a busy day to enjoy a selection of organ works by Johann Sebastian Bach in an intimate venue.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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12:20 pm
Free

Gallery Talk | Marvels of My Own Inventiveness: Curator's Tour


Assistant Curator Brooke Wyatt will lead an in-person, introductory tour of the exhibition. Featuring 22 paintings by five contemporary Black artists in the museum collection, the exhibition explores the artistic self-expression of Black makers working in and around abstraction.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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1:00 pm
Free

Book Club | Theatre and the Question of the Absurd


This four-session course will look at key plays and authors of what has come to be called (notably by critic Martin Esslin) “the Theatre of the Absurd.” With each play, participants will develop their notion of what “the absurd,” as a concept and as a technique, might have meant in the crafting and reception of these plays, and what it could mean now. Should we think of “the absurd” as a philosophical concept (life is meaningless, with no metaphysical presence or authority) – to which the existentialist Jean-Paul Sartre responded by insisting on human responsibility to create meaning? Should we think of “the absurd” as the realm of non-sense (incoherent thought and /or language; disassociation of what is said from what is seen) that captures how we often communicate? Or, is “the absurd” how we label behavior that is unacceptable or incomprehensible? Could “absurdist theatre” engage all of these definitions? The course will also ask why it is that all of these plays have seen recent and successful politicized productions, two (Rhinoceros and The Maids) being newly translated by the brilliant British dramatist Martin Crimp. Could it be that the absurd, seen in a certain light, speaks pointedly to our current historical moment of political crises and insecurity? Participants will be expected to have read the dramatic text BEFORE coming to the relevant session. SECOND SESSION: This session will study the best known and most performed play by Samuel Beckett, Waiting for Godot. The class will concentrate especially on grasping Beckett’s use of several “languages of the stage:” characterization, setting, costumes, stage action (choreography), lighting, and sound, to provoke questions about the meaning of the work. They will ask what “waiting” might possibly suggest and who or what could be “Godot.” Students will also ponder how Godot might be staged to capture the reality we seem to be living today.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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1:00 pm
Free

Classical Music | Baroque Works for Violin, Cello, and More (In Person AND Online)


Lydia Becker, violin; Susannah Foster, violin; Charles Reed, cello & viola da gamba; Alice M. Chuaqui Baldwin, harpsichord perform works written by women composers during the Baroque period.
   New York City, NY; NYC
1:15 pm
Free

Film | Cool Hand Luke (1967) with Paul Newman


When petty criminal Luke Jackson is sentenced to two years in a Florida prison farm, he doesn't play by the rules of either the sadistic warden or the yard's resident heavy, Dragline, who ends up admiring the new guy's unbreakable will. Luke's bravado, even in the face of repeated stints in the prison's dreaded solitary confinement cell, "the box," make him a rebel hero to his fellow convicts and a thorn in the side of the prison officers. Director: Stuart Rosenberg Cast: Paul Newman, George Kennedy, J. D. Cannon, Robert Drivas, Lou Antonio, Strother Martin, Jo Van Fleet Paul Newman was an American actor, film director, race car driver, philanthropist, and entrepreneur. He was the recipient of numerous awards, including an Academy Award, a BAFTA Award, three Golden Globe Awards, a Screen Actors Guild Award, a Primetime Emmy Award, and more.
   New York City, NY; NYC
2:00 pm
Free

Opening Reception | Jinsik Yoo: Procession


In his solo show debut, Yoo uses figurative abstraction to question cultural boundaries, examining the border between myth and reality, the state and its people, and the body and its past or future. Drawing from Korean myths as well as his own experiences, Yoo asks how boundaries are drawn and what it costs to maintain them.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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5:00 pm
Free

Opening Reception | The Diversity of Women's Voices: Group Exhibition


The gallery's membership celebrates 40 years of supporting and promoting women in the visual arts by inviting women artists from diverse backgrounds and from outside the gallery in mounting a powerful exhibition highlighting sisterhood, feminism and forward thinking.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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5:00 pm
Free

Opening Reception | Tschabalala Self: Bodega Run


This show explores these small, largely family-run corner stores as a central institution in the collective imagination and everyday realities of multiple communities of color in New York City.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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5:00 pm
Free

Opening Reception | Brian Rochefort: The Hunter


A striking exhibition of new, never before shown ceramic sculptures covered in optically charged glazes and finishes. The presentation is noteworthy for a marked progression in scale of his celebrated “craters,” and are the artist’s largest to date, or as he says, “as much as I can carry.” In a 2019 interview in T: The New York Times Style Magazine, the artist —who has been aligned and shown alongside Ron Nagle, Ken Price, and Kathy Butterly—told Janelle Zara his sculptures continue to grow in scale, remarking: "They’re starting to get bigger and bigger…I feel like the material can be seriously pushed.” The exhibition also highlights a return for the artist to his wall-based objects—experiments with sand-like texture and color gradients, evoking imprints made on washed over beach or riverbed. A graduate of the Rhode Island School of Design, Rochefort (b. 1985) lives and works in Los Angeles. Noted for his interest in the natural world ranging from the Amazon to Africa, he regularly travels to remote and fragile ecosystems, including the tropical rainforests, volcanoes, and coral reefs to inform works suggesting organic forms like tropical bird feathers or the crackling shells of rock formations. In an adventurous and ecologically concerned art practice, his physical, tactile art also evinces a high skill in colorants and airbrushing cultivated when he was introduced in the late 2000s to technicians and colorists from DuPont. Abstractionists such as Julie Mehretu, Joan Mitchell, Jackson Pollock, Ken Price and Franz West are also constant sources of inspiration.  
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Opening Reception | David Shrigley & Tal R: The Notebook


An artistic collaboration.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Opening Reception | Dominic Chambers: Leave Room for the Wind


Chambers creates vibrant paintings that frequently portray scenes of leisure, joy, and quiet contemplation. In his newest body of work, Chambers continues his examination of the contemporary role of leisure—focusing on its relationship to nature—and explores how art can function as a mode for understanding, recontextualizing, or renegotiating one’s relationship to the world.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Opening Reception | Elisabetta Benassi: The Drowned World


Benassi uses a range of media, including installation, sculpture, photography, and video, to question modernity through the materials of its artistic, cultural, and political dimensions. The Drowned World features all new works conceived and created specifically for the occasion to present an archaeology of the future, an excavation from which the fossils of a vanished world emerge as metallic bones of animals exterminated by man. The exhibition functions as a landscape to be traversed within the gallery. At the entrance is Study for Michelangelo's Head, a life-sized giraffe skull in bronze resting on a workshop stool and the first iteration of a forthcoming work recently selected for commission by the Museo Nazionale Romano to be installed in Michelangelo's Cloister at the Baths of Diocletian.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Opening Reception | Elizabeth Schwaiger: Now & Now & Now


A solo exhibition of new works by the Brooklyn-based painter Elizabeth Schwaiger will include a new series of paintings offering expeditions into unpeopled spaces, unrestrained nature, and uncanny interiors. Submerging herself into physical and psychic depths, she found her subject matter in the art studio—understood both as a historic site to preserve relics of creative ritual, and an expressive place that she can inhabit, at times, more intimately than her own body.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Film | Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953) with Marilyn Monroe


Lorelei Lee is a beautiful showgirl engaged to be married to the wealthy Gus Esmond, much to the disapproval of Gus' rich father, Esmond Sr., who thinks that Lorelei is just after his money. When Lorelei goes on a cruise accompanied only by her best friend, Dorothy Shaw, Esmond Sr. hires Ernie Malone, a private detective, to follow her and report any questionable behavior that would disqualify her from the marriage. Director: Howard Hawks Cast: Jane Russell, Marilyn Monroe Marilyn Monroe was an American actress and model. Known for playing comic "blonde bombshell" characters, she became one of the most popular sex symbols of the 1950s and early 1960s, as well as an emblem of the era's sexual revolution. She was a top-billed actress for a decade, and her films grossed $200 million by the time of her death in 1962. Long after her death, Monroe remains a pop culture icon. In 1999, the American Film Institute ranked her as the sixth-greatest female screen legend from the Golden Age of Hollywood.
   New York City, NY; NYC
6:00 pm
Free

Opening Reception | George Rickey: Wall Reliefs


A solo exhibition of work by pioneering American sculptor George Rickey. Emphasizing wall-mounted stainless steel kinetic sculptures contextualized by the inclusion of significant free-standing examples from the early 1960s through the 1990s, the presentation will draw from the collections of the George Rickey Foundation and the George Rickey Estate, represented by Kasmin since 2020, to demonstrate formal developments in the artist's singular practice over several decades.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Opening Reception | Jack Balas: Some Days (I Just Want to Paint)


Jack Balas is an artist whose work primarily includes painting, drawing, and photography, often incorporating extensive textual elements. After earning BFA and MFA degrees in sculpture from Northern Illinois University, Balas moved from the Chicago area to Los Angeles, where he first worked as a cross-country art shipper, driving between Los Angeles and New York on a route that regularly took him through the western landscapes that have come to define many of his paintings over the years. The exhibition includes many paintings with extensive textual additions. Usually beginning with an innocuous detail, the artist’s anecdotes often wind up in an unexpected place.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Opening Reception | James Welling: Thought Objects


An exhibition of new and recent works by photographer James Welling. Since the 1970s, when he was a student at the California Institute of the Arts, Welling has become known for a relentlessly evolving body of images that considers both the history and technical specificities of photography. His work signaled a break with traditional ideas of photography by shifting attention to the construction of images themselves.  Thought Objects will present a group of loosely connected works, achieved through a range of digital processes, that together extend Welling’s ongoing investigation into what a photograph can be. Taking his long-standing interest in experimental procedures, such as 1960s psychedelic imagery, as a starting point, with these images Welling expands his inquiry into how these historic analog processes can be modeled in the digital environment. Borrowing from the physicality of printmaking, the artist marshals the digital tools available to him in unconventional ways to create compositions that are alternately built up in layers, over-saturated, collaged, reticulated, and tonally inverted.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Opening Reception | Karlheinz Weinberger: Subsequent Icons


A selection of vintage photographs by Swiss photographer Karlheinz Weinberger (1921-2006). The exhibition focuses on the serial nature of Weinberger's solo portraits of men from the late 1950s through the mid-1970s whom he invited into his makeshift studio in the apartment he shared with his mother. The men in these portraits--construction workers, street vendors, bicycle messengers, outsiders--span a spectrum of fully clothed, arms-crossed poses to campy and flirtatious, fully nude and reclined, while others mimic art historical postures. All of these images, though, reveal a palpable sense of tenderness between photographer and subject, revealing an expansive and uncritical take on the male form in an era when being photographed wasn't such a casual, ubiquitous record as it is today. The photographs in this exhibition are framed as diptychs, triptychs, and quadriptychs featuring the same individual in each grouping. The intention is to highlight the serial nature of Weinberger's practice. All of the images displayed were styled, shot and printed by the artist while he was alive. Weinberger's subjects share an unconventional charisma that is more adequately conveyed through a series of photos, allowing him to transcend the limits of a single image. Viewed in this way, for example, one is able to search the expressions of a tattooed man as he strikes a similar stance in two photos, one while wearing underwear, and in another, without.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Opening Reception | Kinding Sindaw: In Honor of the Ancestors


Kinding Sindaw reclaims and revitalizes the living traditions and oral histories native to the island of Mindanao in the Southern Philippines, and advocates for the self-determination of 63 Indigenous nations, including the Bukidnon, Maguindanao, Maranao, Tausug, and T’boli. Led exclusively by tradition-bearers who are the rightful owners, heirs, and stewards of this cultural heritage, Kinding Sindaw’s pedagogy not only asserts rigor and fidelity, but also advances a model for resisting extractive practices and appropriation in art and activism at large. In 1992, Potri Ranka Manis–an immigrant nurse and daughter of the late Mamintal Dirampaten, Sultan a Gaus of the Royal Maranao House of Borocot—initially founded Kinding Sindaw out of concern that her children would be raised in the United States detached from their culture and their birthright. Through an ever expanding and inclusive notion of family and community, Kinding Sindaw understands traditional arts as a way to heal the traumas of colonization and displacement not only for Filipino-Americans, but all allied immigrant, refugee, and Indigenous communities in diaspora.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Opening Reception | Mark Yang: Birth


Mark Yang’s first solo exhibition with the gallery showcases the recent technical and thematic developments in the artist’s painting practice. Colorful, incongruous arrays of anonymous limbs entangled together investigate the nuances of human interaction through a critical lens of art history. Morphing and distorting idealized figures into conglomerates of body parts, Yang’s forms exhibit a sculptural quality, the result of the artist’s thoughtful rendering of plane, dimension, and space.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Opening Reception | Mika Tajima: Energetics


Through her multidisciplinary practice, Mika Tajima takes up questions of identity and agency in a world increasingly influenced and mitigated by technology. Her first exhibition at the gallery and first solo show in the city in eight years brings together sculptural, textile, and evolving sensorial works.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Opening Reception | Reka Nyari: Chromatic Ink


An exhibition of new large-scale photographs by Reka Nyari. This suite of 14 works is part of an ongoing portraiture project which Nyari introduced in 2017 with her first solo exhibition at the gallery. This body of work continues to explore a central element of Nyari’s practice: intimate studies of self-identity and female empowerment through nude portraiture.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Gallery Talk | Stéphane Mandelbaum: Exhibition Discussion


Ranging from large-scale portraits to small sketches, Stéphane Mandelbaum’s drawings of historic figures, friends, and anonymous characters who populated Brussels’s subcultures are consummate in technique and deeply disturbing in subject matter. A native of Brussels, Mandelbaum made art for ten years, but in that time he created hundreds of drawings. Mandelbaum sought to capture the essence of his subject’s characters with a ballpoint pen, graphite, and color pencil, often adding collaged magazine clippings, scribbles, lists, and text in French, Yiddish, Italian, and German. Art historian Benjamin Buchloh and Cathy Caruth, Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Cornell University, with Executive Director Laura Hoptman, have a discussion on the subject of contemporary art, trauma and postwar European history in relation to the work of Stéphane Mandelbaum.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Opening Reception | The New Transcendence: Group Exhibition


The New Transcendence will explore the place of the spiritual in contemporary design today. The works on view are infused with profound significance, whether as relics, ritual tools, or representations. The New Transcendence is not an exhibition about religion in the organized, traditional, or dogmatic sense. Rather, it aims to discover how design can serve as a vehicle for personal and societal transcendence.   The exhibition includes work by six designers: Ini Archibong, Andrea Branzi, Stephen Burks, Najla El Zein, Courtney M. Leonard, and Samuel Ross. Each of the participants has their own perspective, yet one thing unites them: the impetus to provide an objective, material anchor for the subjective and ultimately private nature of spiritual belief. The immaterial means something different, today, in our digital age – perhaps making physical artifacts more crucial as anchors for transcendent experience.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Discussion | Cinema Chats: Maestro (online)


Maestro has been named as one of the top ten films of 2023. Led by a pair of powerful performances by Bradley Cooper and Carey Mulligan, Maestro serves as a stirring overview of Leonard Bernstein’s life and legacy. It chronicles the lifelong relationship of conductor-composer Bernstein and actress Felicia Montealegre Cohn Bernstein. In addition to his leading role, Cooper co-wrote the screenplay and directed the film. This is a discussion of the film with New York Times film critic Manohla Dargis and moderator Lucy Shahar.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Pay-what-you-wish

Gallery Talk | Layers of Perception: The Pictures Generation and Beyond


Panelists Sara VanDerBeek Michael Bevilacqua Moderator Hong Gyu Shin A discussion of the retrospective of the renowned movement of the 1970s and ‘80s, featuring artists who influenced, were part of, or were inspired by the Pictures Generation– a term coined from a small group exhibition called Pictures, hosted at Artists Space in 1977. That show, curated by Douglas Crimp, drew together contemporary artists of the time, Troy Brauntuch, Jack Goldstein, Sherrie Levine, Robert Longo and Philip Smith, to dissect media culture and question the meaning of a socially constructed identity. In Crimp’s words, the Pictures Generation artists were about “re-presentation, not representation.” This exhibition is a collaborative story built on the same beliefs of those innovative Pictures Generation artists, in admiration of unconventional works celebrating the artistic provocateurs of their time.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:30 pm
Free

Gallery Talk | Unnamed Figures: Black Presence and Absence in the Early American North: A Critical Walkthrough


Yusuf Hassan and Kwame Sorrell, co-founders of the artist collective Black Mass, will lead a critical walkthrough of the exhibition which offers a window onto Black representation and narratives of early African American history. Challenging the physical and poetic boundaries of historical materials, this tour will meditate on the past and present's significance of the objects on view.
   New York City, NY; NYC
6:30 pm
Free

Poetry Reading | An Evening of Poetry


With Shamar Hill, Enzo Silon Surin, and Martha Collins  
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:30 pm
$5

Discussion | Family History Today: The Krakovsky Documents (online)


For several years, Alex Krakovsky, a Ukrainian Jew, has been scanning Jewish metrical and census records found in long-closed Ukrainian archives and placing these documents, predominantly in Cyrillic (Russian), on a website where they can easily be accessed. Gary Pokrassa and Joel Spector, Director of Data Acquisition and Metric Record Projects, respectively, at the JewishGen Ukraine Research Division, will discuss the origin and method of Krakovsky’s data acquisition and provide an overview of the contents of his site. Additionally, they will explain how to navigate the files in English, offer tips on working with the indexes and documents, and describe the Ukraine Research Division’s ongoing role in this project.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
Pay-what-you-wish

Discussion | Jane and Justice: A Panel on Abortion and Birth Justice


An evening of conversation on birth and abortion justice with Abby Pariser, a longtime activist and former member of Jane, the clandestine Chicago abortion service that provided abortion access before Roe v Wade. She’ll discuss the fight for individual autonomy, equality, and how disparities continue to exist within access to reproductive healthcare, honoring MLK’s vision for a more just world and kicking off MLK Weekend of Service.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
Free

Discussion | January 6th: An American Story (online)


With: Farai Chideya, Marcus Childress, Soumya Dayananda, and Candyce Phoenix The January 6th Committee Hearings reached an audience of 20 million-plus people, and the investigators behind them stepped up to save American democracy. A surprising number of these investigators were Black, Latino, or South Asian — including three of the five team leads. January 6th: An American Story, is an audio documentary focusing on the Black and brown legal eagles of the January 6th Committee. These are the people whose work laid the foundation for the indictments of former President Trump. They endured the trauma of investigating the most powerful white supremacists in America, as well as tracing the legal and financial web of January 6th. In this special event hosted by Farai Chideya, the creator and host of Our Body Politic, you’ll have the opportunity to hear from three of the investigators of what it took to save our democracy.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
Free

Slide Lecture | Peru: Real People


Since 2010, Lima-born, NYC-based photographer and educator Inti Pachurin has traveled thousands of miles throughout Peru, photographing the region’s indigenous people and connecting with his Inca heritage. Pachurin will explore the astonishing biodiversity and remote tribes across forests, deserts, and mountains to reveal how cultures on the verge of extinction change and adapt in the face of pollution, climate change, and industrialization.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
Free

Concert | Soulful R&B and Afro Funk


Olivia K & The Parkers is the brainchild of Olivia K, singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and fearless leader. Her music infuses soulful R&B with diasporic afro funk, drawing from her Afro-Caribbean roots to create an entirely unique and enthralling experience for her audience. A Brooklynite since birth--and proud of it--Olivia Khe-ra and her multi-piece ensemble rose up from the ashes of COVID with a mission to brighten up an all too dark world. Following packed shows at Brooklyn Bowl, Brooklyn Museum's First Saturdays, BRIC's Celebrate Brooklyn, and a residency at Joe's Pub, Olivia and the band have polished their feel-good sound to a high sheen. Their sets of honey sweet originals are just the thing to make you leave your problems out on the street and get you up on your feet.
   New York City, NY; NYC
7:30 pm
Free

Comedy Club | Bomb Shelter Comedy Show


Bomb Shelter is a free weekly comedy show in New York City where you'll find some of the best comedians performing. Expect free pizza. With: Pedro Gonzalez - Late night with Colbert, Writer on Primo D'yan Forest - Drew Barrymore Show, Joe’s Pub Justin Catchens - UCB
   New York City, NY; NYC
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8:00 pm
Free

Dance Performance | Out-FRONT! Fest 2024: A Radical Queer Art + Dance Festival


The 2024 festival features performances by Arthur Aviles and Collaborators, Joey Kipp with Pioneers Go East Collective, Christopher Unpezverde Nunez, Jason Anthony Rodriguez, Paz Tanjuaquio, Ogemdi Ude, and Annie MingHao Wang, as well as films by Fana Fraser, Omega X, and Tourmaline.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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8:00 pm
Pay-what-you-wish
Complimentary Tickets

to shows, concerts ... (CFT Deals!)

Classical Music | Sacred Choral Works at a Landmark Venue

Regular Price: $49
CFT Member Price: $0.00

Theater | Storytelling at its Best from Far Away

Regular Price: $51
CFT Member Price: $0.00
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