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DTSTART:20220929T210000Z
DTEND:20220929T230000Z
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SUMMARY:BAH 2022: 09.29.2022 Networking Night at the Museum
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a unique networking opportunity!\n\n\n\n\n\nEnjoy Light Fare\, Beverages\, Networking and \n\na private viewing of \n\n\n\nTHIS SMITHSONIAN TRAVELING EXHIBIT EXPLORES THE\n\nNEARLY 250-YEAR-OLD AMERICAN EXPERIMENT WITH\n\nGOVERNMENT OF\, BY\, AND FOR THE PEOPLE.\n\n \n\nABOUT VOICES & VOTES\n\nWhen American revolutionaries waged a war for independence they took a leap of faith that sent ripple effects across generations. They embraced a radical idea of establishing a government that entrusted the power of the nation not in a monarchy\, but in its citizens. That great leap sparked questions that continue to impact Americans:\n\n \n\n  Who has the right to vote?\n\n  What are the freedoms and responsibilities of citizens\n\n  Whose voices will be heard?\n\n  How do you participate as a citizen?\n\n \n\nVoices and Votes: Democracy in America will be a springboard for discussions about those very questions and how they are reflected in local stories.\n\n \n\nVoices and Votes is based on a major exhibition currently on display at the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History called American Democracy: A Great Leap of Faith. Content development for Voices and Votes was led by Harry Rubenstein\, Curator Emeritus in the Division of Political History at the National Museum of American History. Voices and Votes has many dynamic features: historical and contemporary photos\; educational and archival video\; engaging multimedia interactives with short games and additional footage\, photos\, and information\; and historical objects like campaign souvenirs\, voter memorabilia\, and protest material.\n\n \n\n\nOur democracy demands action\, reaction\, vision\, and revision as we continue to question how to form "a more perfect union." From the revolution and suffrage\, to civil rights and casting ballots\, everyone in every community is part of this ever-evolving story   the story of democracy in America.\n\n \n\nVoices and Votes has been made possible at Brookdale Community College and the Monmouth Museum by the New Jersey Council for the Humanities. \n\n \n\nVoices and Votes is part of Museum on Main Street\, a collaboration between the Smithsonian Institution and the Federation of State Humanities Councils. Support for Museum on Main Street has been provided by the United States Congress.\n\n\n\n \n\n\n\n\n \n\nIn Monmouth Museum's Nilson Gallery\n\nKathleen Beausoleil\n\n\n\nIndividuals like to think about themselves as conspicuously unique personalities. Take a closer look however and it's pretty clear that we are deeply social animals\, biologically programmed for social interaction and territorial tribal behavior.\n\n \n\nFor people watchers and students of human conduct\, recent social and political unrest combined with a dangerous global pandemic have posited serious questions about the long-term effects of isolation and lack of access to traditional social relationships.\n\n \n\nThe pandemic with all its restrictions seems to have struck at a fragile time of unprecedented divisiveness and polarized politics that have complicated participation in our basic rights of citizenship\, which include voting rights and civil rights along with our constitutional right to peaceful public assembly. Yet\, the urge to express ourselves as socially oriented tribal animals persists.\n\n \n\nIn spite of\, or perhaps in reaction to all this extraordinary mayhem\, Kathleen Beausoleil has been in her studio exploring silver linings of opportunity and reflecting on the various ways we gather to express our rights as citizens. She has been observing and learning about where we draw lines in the sand of our moral and ethical responsibilities to each other and to country. By documenting crucial moments of notable protest over the past several years\, her works offer glimpses into some of the new ways we struggle to affect positive change.\n\n \n\nSo\, what are the long-term repercussions of pandemic isolation in what seems like an ever intensifying political\, cultural\, and racially polarized American landscape? How will it affect the ways we interact with one and other in the future? How will it impact our right to free speech and the way we exercise our right to peaceful assembly?\n\n \n\nIn an attempt to reconcile the space between us\, Beausoleil's new works are visual meditations on these puzzles and challenge us to reflect on our own place in the answers to these questions.\n\n \n\nIn the artist's own words\, "It's my experience\, that as much as people need their privacy\, they need other people feel accepted and fulfilled. They also need other people to project their grievances and rally around a common enemy. As social animals\, we tend to find joy and meaning in the sense of belonging to something larger than ourselves. We are reassured and informed by the echoes of our personal scruples in the voice of our larger tribal identities."
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<h2 style="font-style: italic\; text-align: center\;"><span style="font-size:24px\;"><span style="font-family:tahoma\;">Join us for a unique networking opportunity!</span></span></h2>\n\n<div style="text-align: center\;"><img alt="" height="600" src="https://chambermaster.blob.core.windows.net/userfiles/UserFiles/chambers/3344/Image/BAH/BAH_2022/BAH2022.09.29.2022Update.png" style="width: 600px\; height: 600px\;" width="600" /><br />\n<br />\n<span style="font-size:20px\;">Enjoy Light Fare\, Beverages\, Networking and&nbsp\;<br />\na private viewing of&nbsp\;</span>\n\n<div><span style="font-size:20px\;"><img alt="" height="75" src="https://chambermaster.blob.core.windows.net/userfiles/UserFiles/chambers/3344/Image/BAH/BAH_2022/BAh_092922_Monmouth_Museum/VoicesandVotesLogo.jpg" style="width: 100px\; height: 75px\;" width="100" /></span><br />\n<span style="font-size:12px\;"><span style="color: rgb(41\, 75\, 147)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-weight: 700\; text-align: center\;">THIS SMITHSONIAN TRAVELING EXHIBIT EXPLORES THE<br />\nNEARLY 250-YEAR-OLD AMERICAN EXPERIMENT WITH<br />\nGOVERNMENT OF\, BY\, AND FOR THE PEOPLE.</span></span></div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\;">&nbsp\;</div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\; text-align: left\;"><span style="font-size:12px\;"><span style="color: rgb(41\, 75\, 147)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-weight: 700\;">ABOUT VOICES &amp\; VOTES</span></span><br />\n<span style="font-size:12px\;"><span style="color: rgb(0\, 0\, 0)\;">When American revolutionaries waged a war for independence they took a leap of faith that sent ripple effects across generations. They embraced a radical idea of establishing a government that entrusted the power of the nation not in a monarchy\, but in its citizens. That great leap sparked questions that continue to impact Americans:</span></span></div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\; text-align: left\;"><span style="font-size:12px\;"><span style="color: rgb(0\, 0\, 0)\;">&#8203\;</span></span></div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\; text-align: left\;"><span style="font-size:12px\;"><span style="color: rgb(0\, 0\, 0)\;">&bull\; Who has the right to vote?</span></span></div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\; text-align: left\;"><span style="font-size:12px\;"><span style="color: rgb(0\, 0\, 0)\;">&bull\; What are the freedoms and responsibilities of citizens</span></span></div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\; text-align: left\;"><span style="font-size:12px\;"><span style="color: rgb(0\, 0\, 0)\;">&bull\; Whose voices will be heard?</span></span></div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\; text-align: left\;"><span style="font-size:12px\;"><span style="color: rgb(0\, 0\, 0)\;">&bull\; How do you participate as a citizen?</span></span></div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\; text-align: left\;"><span style="font-size:12px\;"><span style="color: rgb(0\, 0\, 0)\;">&nbsp\;</span></span></div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\; text-align: left\;"><span style="font-size:12px\;"><span style="color: rgb(0\, 0\, 0)\;">Voices and Votes: Democracy in America will be a springboard for discussions about those very questions and how they are reflected in local stories.</span></span></div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\; text-align: left\;"><span style="font-size:12px\;"><span style="color: rgb(0\, 0\, 0)\;">&nbsp\;</span></span></div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\; text-align: left\;"><span style="font-size:12px\;"><span style="color: rgb(0\, 0\, 0)\;">Voices and Votes is based on a major exhibition currently on display at the Smithsonian&rsquo\;s National Museum of American History called American Democracy: A Great Leap of Faith. Content development for Voices and Votes was led by Harry Rubenstein\, Curator Emeritus in the Division of Political History at the National Museum of American History. Voices and Votes has many dynamic features: historical and contemporary photos\; educational and archival video\; engaging multimedia interactives with short games and additional footage\, photos\, and information\; and historical objects like campaign souvenirs\, voter memorabilia\, and protest material.</span></span></div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\; text-align: left\;"><span style="font-size:12px\;"><span style="color: rgb(0\, 0\, 0)\;">&nbsp\;</span></span></div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\; text-align: left\;">\n<div><span style="font-size:12px\;"><span style="color: rgb(0\, 0\, 0)\;">Our democracy demands action\, reaction\, vision\, and revision as we continue to question how to form &ldquo\;a more perfect union.&rdquo\; From the revolution and suffrage\, to civil rights and casting ballots\, everyone in every community is part of this ever-evolving story &ndash\; the story of democracy in America.</span></span><br />\n&nbsp\;</div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\;"><span style="font-size:12px\;"><span style="color: rgb(41\, 75\, 147)\;">Voices and Votes has been made possible at Brookdale Community College and the Monmouth Museum by the New Jersey Council for the Humanities.&nbsp\;</span></span></div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\;">&nbsp\;</div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\;"><span style="font-size:12px\;"><span style="color: rgb(41\, 75\, 147)\;">Voices and Votes is part of Museum on Main Street\, a collaboration between the Smithsonian Institution and the Federation of State Humanities Councils. Support for Museum on Main Street has been provided by the United States Congress.</span></span></div>\n\n<div><br />\n<span style="font-size:12px\;">&nbsp\;<img alt="" height="133" src="https://chambermaster.blob.core.windows.net/userfiles/UserFiles/chambers/3344/Image/BAH/BAH_2022/BAh_092922_Monmouth_Museum/VotesLogosScreenShot2022-08-17at10.51.51AM.png" style="width: 300px\; height: 133px\;" width="300" /></span></div>\n</div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\; text-align: left\;">\n<hr />\n<div>&nbsp\;</div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\;"><span style="font-size:12px\;"><span font-weight:="" open="" style="color: rgb(191\, 63\, 47)\;">In Monmouth Museum&#39\;s Nilson Gallery</span></span></div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\;"><span style="font-size:12px\;"><span font-weight:="" open="" style="color: rgb(41\, 75\, 147)\;">Kathleen Beausoleil</span></span></div>\n\n<div><span style="font-size:12px\;"><span style="color: rgb(0\, 0\, 0)\;"><img alt="" height="135" src="https://chambermaster.blob.core.windows.net/userfiles/UserFiles/chambers/3344/Image/BAH/BAH_2022/BAh_092922_Monmouth_Museum/KathleenBeausoleil.jpg" style="width: 100px\; height: 135px\;" width="100" /></span></span></div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\;"><span style="font-size:12px\;"><span style="color: rgb(0\, 0\, 0)\;">Individuals like to think about themselves as conspicuously unique personalities. Take a closer look however and it&rsquo\;s pretty clear that we are deeply social animals\, biologically programmed for social interaction and territorial tribal behavior.</span></span></div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\;">&nbsp\;</div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\;"><span style="font-size:12px\;"><span style="color: rgb(0\, 0\, 0)\;">For people watchers and students of human conduct\, recent social and political unrest combined with a dangerous global pandemic have posited serious questions about the long-term effects of isolation and lack of access to traditional social relationships.</span></span></div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\;">&nbsp\;</div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\;"><span style="font-size:12px\;"><span style="color: rgb(0\, 0\, 0)\;">The pandemic with all its restrictions seems to have struck at a fragile time of unprecedented divisiveness and polarized politics that have complicated participation in our basic rights of citizenship\, which include voting rights and civil rights along with our constitutional right to peaceful public assembly. Yet\, the urge to express ourselves as socially oriented tribal animals persists.</span></span></div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\;">&nbsp\;</div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\;"><span style="font-size:12px\;"><span style="color: rgb(0\, 0\, 0)\;">In spite of\, or perhaps in reaction to all this extraordinary mayhem\, Kathleen Beausoleil has been in her studio exploring silver linings of opportunity and reflecting on the various ways we gather to express our rights as citizens. She has been observing and learning about where we draw lines in the sand of our moral and ethical responsibilities to each other and to country. By documenting crucial moments of notable protest over the past several years\, her works offer glimpses into some of the new ways we struggle to affect positive change.</span></span></div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\;">&nbsp\;</div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\;"><span style="font-size:12px\;"><span style="color: rgb(0\, 0\, 0)\;">So\, what are the long-term repercussions of pandemic isolation in what seems like an ever intensifying political\, cultural\, and racially polarized American landscape? How will it affect the ways we interact with one and other in the future? How will it impact our right to free speech and the way we exercise our right to peaceful assembly?</span></span></div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\;">&nbsp\;</div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\;"><span style="font-size:12px\;"><span style="color: rgb(0\, 0\, 0)\;">In an attempt to reconcile the space between us\, Beausoleil&rsquo\;s new works are visual meditations on these puzzles and challenge us to reflect on our own place in the answers to these questions.</span></span></div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\;"><span style="font-size:12px\;"><span style="color: rgb(0\, 0\, 0)\;">&#8203\;</span></span></div>\n\n<div style="color: rgb(64\, 63\, 66)\; font-family: Arial\, Verdana\, Helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12px\;"><span style="font-size:12px\;"><span style="color: rgb(0\, 0\, 0)\;">In the artist&rsquo\;s own words\, &ldquo\;It&rsquo\;s my experience\, that as much as people need their privacy\, they need other people feel accepted and fulfilled. They also need other people to project their grievances and rally around a common enemy. As social animals\, we tend to find joy and meaning in the sense of belonging to something larger than ourselves. We are reassured and informed by the echoes of our personal scruples in the voice of our larger tribal identities.&rdquo\;</span></span></div>\n</div>\n</div>\n
LOCATION:Location: Monmouth Museum located on the Brookdale Community College Lincroft campus\, 765 Newman Springs Road\, Lincroft\, NJ\, building 10\, parking lot #1. The door to enter is on the left side of the building. When entering parking lot one\, enter at the first sign for the museum and stay to the left of lot for clearer view of the entrance. The door on the far right will be locked an unattended.
UID:e.3344.2941
SEQUENCE:3
DTSTAMP:20260521T073734Z
URL:https://business.emacc.org/events/details/bah-2022-09-29-2022-networking-night-at-the-museum-2941
END:VEVENT

END:VCALENDAR
