Elaine Audrey Saunches, Visiting Scholar of Stony Brook University Libraries, will deliver a talk titled “The University of West Indies Mona Library at its Best.” If you have a disability and are requesting accommodations in order to fully participate in…
Presented by the SBU Libraries social media interns, a fun night full of crafts, blackout poetry, and free snacks! You can also play our library history trivia game and win free swag. Drop in at any time between 7:00 –…
Joseph Pierce, SBU Associate Professor in the Department of Hispanic Languages and Literature, will discuss how contemporary Indigenous artists have remixed and redefined the genre of ethnographic portraiture. Focusing on photography and painting from the late nineteenth century, and on…
The Libraries’ final call for feedback on our strategic planning is here. Please fill out our survey and take part in the libraries’ future. The survey will take about 5 minutes to complete and is open until October 20, 2023,…
SBU Libraries, in collaboration with the Office of Veterans Affairs and Suffolk County Community College Libraries, wishes to recognize veterans at both institutions for their service. Please join us for a lively discussion of the 2017 film Megan Leavey, based…
Join us for Stony Brook University’s first-ever Human Library event! Designed to challenge stereotypes and prejudice through open dialogue with real people, the Human Library gives attendees an opportunity to “check out” Open Books for 20 minute conversations. Each Book is…
In the 1950s and 60s, Coenties Slip – an obscure little street at the lower tip of Manhattan overlooking the East River – was home to a group of extraordinary, then-struggling artists: Robert Indiana, Ellsworth Kelly, Agnes Martin, James Rosenquist,…
How did a newly landed Polish Jewish artist transform his brush and pen into powerful anti-Nazi propaganda weapons in the years and months leading into and throughout World War II? In conjunction with the Fairfield University Art Museum’s special exhibition…
In January 1951, the Betty Parsons Gallery staged a little-known loan exhibition of American abstractionists at the School of the Museum of Fine arts, Boston. Students experienced first-hand works by Jackson Pollock, Mark Rothko, Theodoros Stamos, Hedda Sterne, Richard Pousette-Dart…
Students of Prof. Frautschi will perform selections from the violin repertory. If you have a disability and are requesting accommodations in order to fully participate in this event, please email libraryevents@stonybrook.edu or call 631-632-7100.