Eisenhower Auditorium Answers the Question ‘What Does PURPLE Sound Like’

– by Thomas Range II

A feeling with no name - “purple” - is inspiration for an interactive performance that celebrates the diversity and solidarity of our community.

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What Does PURPLE Sound Like?” is a multi-media art installation that focuses on and makes visible our neighbors of a distinctive age throughout central Pennsylvania. The program will highlight participants from the Centre County region in performance alongside Sydnie L. Mosley Dances artists in excerpts from “PURPLE: A Ritual in Nine Spells.”

The audience will be seated on the Eisenhower Auditorium stage in one of three performance-exhibits at 7 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday, Feb. 4 and 5, and 2 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 6.

No tickets will be issued for the general-admission program. The event is pay-what-you-wish, and registration is required. Call 814-863-0255 or visit “PURPLE” online to register for a performance or for more information about a free community Joyfull event.

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photo by Effy Grey

Participants in “What Does PURPLE Sound Like?” are invited to take their time to browse and engage with an on-stage gallery installation featuring a peaceful presence of movement by SLMDances; quilts by Shani Peters and on loan by Dr. Kim F. Hall; short films produced by Orion Gordon and Veleda Roehl of RAH Productions; and photographs and additional video footage by Center for the Performing Arts multimedia specialist Michael W. Fleck.

Watch a preview of “What Does PURPLE Sound Like?

SLMDances and the artists’ collection of projects is inspired by Alice Walker’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, “The Color Purple.”

“Walker talks about purple as this color that God has put here for us. And God wants us to enjoy it,” Mosley said in a Center for the Performing Arts interview. “It evokes this feeling that maybe can’t quite be named. It points us to the larger world, in the larger universe. And pointing us to that is also creating this feeling of connection and joy and sisterhood and all of that.”

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photo by Effy Grey

Mosley said she hopes the event helps the participants find connection, closure and creativity.

“I want people to find and experience joy and maybe some permission and maybe some healing. I would really love for people to connect with folks that they've never met before. And I would love for people to walk away feeling like they have, experienced something in their body that they maybe didn't even know was there or that they could do,” she said.

In August, the National Endowment for the Arts awarded the Center for the Performing Arts at Penn State a Grants for Arts Projects award of $50,000 to support “What Does PURPLE Sound Like?

“We are thrilled with our collaboration with Sydnie L Mosley Dances this year, thanks to support from the NEA multidisciplinary arts-projects grant,” Center Director Sita Frederick said. “As we continue the celebration of our building’s 50th anniversary, I'm excited to see our stage transform with an installation and performances by Sydnie L. Mosley Dances and community members. The creativity in our community is boundless and we are here to celebrate it.”

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photo by Effy Grey

FREE RELATED ENGAGEMENT EVENTS

The Joyfull - PURPLE Edition
6 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 29

Heritage Hall, HUB-Robeson Center

When our bodies are hungry, we need to eat. But when our souls are hungry, we crave a different kind of nourishment. Just like food, art comes from many forms, cultural backgrounds, and histories. At each Joyfull, we welcome all to come and enjoy a meal, live performance and conversation.

Join the Center for the Performing Arts at 6 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 29, in Heritage Hall of the HUB-Robeson Center for an artistic program and dinner.

Free sustainable utensil sets will be given to first-time attendees while supplies last. Help us reduce waste by bringing them with you to use at each Joyfull. We also will offer recipe cards at the event. If you would like to contribute, please bring a recipe of your choice to share.

The event is free, but registration is required. Visit The Joyfull online for more info and to register.

Ancestry and Invisible Communities Virtual Intergenerational Panel
3:15 p.m. Monday, Feb. 10

Virtual event

A Virtual Intergenerational Panel, focusing on themes of ancestry and invisible communities, will feature participating speakers to be announced. The free online Zoom webinar event is open to the public, but registration is required. More information is available HERE.

The Happy Valley Adventure Bureau publishes up-to-date event information at HappyValley.com/events