BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:icalendar-ruby
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
X-WR-CALNAME:Exhibition: Anina Major and Tamika Galanis
X-WR-TIMEZONE:Eastern Time (US & Canada)
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260513T003031Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40818468594264
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220917
DESCRIPTION:"The Ties That Bind: The Paradox of Cultural Survival amid Clim
 ate Events\," an exhibition of sculpture by Anina Major and photography by
  Tamika Galanis\, will be on display at the Lyndon House Art Center from S
 ept. 17 through Nov. 30. The exhibit is a partnership between the Lyndon H
 ouse and the Willson Center for Humanities and Arts.\n\nThis exhibition or
 iginated on St. Helena Island\, SC during an artist residency in which the
  artists examined cultural identity and sustainability through environment
 al relationships. Galanis and Major are both from The Bahamas and now base
 d in Atlanta and New York City respectively. Both multimedia artists’ wo
 rk interrogates popular conceptions of place: Major’s through investigat
 ing “the relationship between self and place as a site of negotiation\,
 ” and Galanis’s by examining “the complexities of living in a place 
 shrouded in tourism’s ideal during the age of climate concerns."\n\nThe 
 artists’ work inspired by this residency explores notions of life in the
  Sea Islands of South Carolina and The Bahama Islands.\n\nAccompanying pro
 grams for "The Ties That Bind" will be in conjunction with UGA’s Spotlig
 ht on the Arts festival in November 2022.
GEO:33.964481;-83.376351
LOCATION:Lyndon House Arts Center
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Anina Major and Tamika Galanis
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uga.edu/event/exhibition_anina_major_and_tam
 ika_galanis
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
CATEGORIES:Ongoing
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260513T003031Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40818468609631
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220924
DESCRIPTION:"The Ties That Bind: The Paradox of Cultural Survival amid Clim
 ate Events\," an exhibition of sculpture by Anina Major and photography by
  Tamika Galanis\, will be on display at the Lyndon House Art Center from S
 ept. 17 through Nov. 30. The exhibit is a partnership between the Lyndon H
 ouse and the Willson Center for Humanities and Arts.\n\nThis exhibition or
 iginated on St. Helena Island\, SC during an artist residency in which the
  artists examined cultural identity and sustainability through environment
 al relationships. Galanis and Major are both from The Bahamas and now base
 d in Atlanta and New York City respectively. Both multimedia artists’ wo
 rk interrogates popular conceptions of place: Major’s through investigat
 ing “the relationship between self and place as a site of negotiation\,
 ” and Galanis’s by examining “the complexities of living in a place 
 shrouded in tourism’s ideal during the age of climate concerns."\n\nThe 
 artists’ work inspired by this residency explores notions of life in the
  Sea Islands of South Carolina and The Bahama Islands.\n\nAccompanying pro
 grams for "The Ties That Bind" will be in conjunction with UGA’s Spotlig
 ht on the Arts festival in November 2022.
GEO:33.964481;-83.376351
LOCATION:Lyndon House Arts Center
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Anina Major and Tamika Galanis
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uga.edu/event/exhibition_anina_major_and_tam
 ika_galanis
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
CATEGORIES:Ongoing
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260513T003031Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40818468623974
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20221001
DESCRIPTION:"The Ties That Bind: The Paradox of Cultural Survival amid Clim
 ate Events\," an exhibition of sculpture by Anina Major and photography by
  Tamika Galanis\, will be on display at the Lyndon House Art Center from S
 ept. 17 through Nov. 30. The exhibit is a partnership between the Lyndon H
 ouse and the Willson Center for Humanities and Arts.\n\nThis exhibition or
 iginated on St. Helena Island\, SC during an artist residency in which the
  artists examined cultural identity and sustainability through environment
 al relationships. Galanis and Major are both from The Bahamas and now base
 d in Atlanta and New York City respectively. Both multimedia artists’ wo
 rk interrogates popular conceptions of place: Major’s through investigat
 ing “the relationship between self and place as a site of negotiation\,
 ” and Galanis’s by examining “the complexities of living in a place 
 shrouded in tourism’s ideal during the age of climate concerns."\n\nThe 
 artists’ work inspired by this residency explores notions of life in the
  Sea Islands of South Carolina and The Bahama Islands.\n\nAccompanying pro
 grams for "The Ties That Bind" will be in conjunction with UGA’s Spotlig
 ht on the Arts festival in November 2022.
GEO:33.964481;-83.376351
LOCATION:Lyndon House Arts Center
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Anina Major and Tamika Galanis
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uga.edu/event/exhibition_anina_major_and_tam
 ika_galanis
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
CATEGORIES:Ongoing
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260513T003031Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40818468639341
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20221008
DESCRIPTION:"The Ties That Bind: The Paradox of Cultural Survival amid Clim
 ate Events\," an exhibition of sculpture by Anina Major and photography by
  Tamika Galanis\, will be on display at the Lyndon House Art Center from S
 ept. 17 through Nov. 30. The exhibit is a partnership between the Lyndon H
 ouse and the Willson Center for Humanities and Arts.\n\nThis exhibition or
 iginated on St. Helena Island\, SC during an artist residency in which the
  artists examined cultural identity and sustainability through environment
 al relationships. Galanis and Major are both from The Bahamas and now base
 d in Atlanta and New York City respectively. Both multimedia artists’ wo
 rk interrogates popular conceptions of place: Major’s through investigat
 ing “the relationship between self and place as a site of negotiation\,
 ” and Galanis’s by examining “the complexities of living in a place 
 shrouded in tourism’s ideal during the age of climate concerns."\n\nThe 
 artists’ work inspired by this residency explores notions of life in the
  Sea Islands of South Carolina and The Bahama Islands.\n\nAccompanying pro
 grams for "The Ties That Bind" will be in conjunction with UGA’s Spotlig
 ht on the Arts festival in November 2022.
GEO:33.964481;-83.376351
LOCATION:Lyndon House Arts Center
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Anina Major and Tamika Galanis
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uga.edu/event/exhibition_anina_major_and_tam
 ika_galanis
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
CATEGORIES:Ongoing
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260513T003031Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40818468653684
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20221015
DESCRIPTION:"The Ties That Bind: The Paradox of Cultural Survival amid Clim
 ate Events\," an exhibition of sculpture by Anina Major and photography by
  Tamika Galanis\, will be on display at the Lyndon House Art Center from S
 ept. 17 through Nov. 30. The exhibit is a partnership between the Lyndon H
 ouse and the Willson Center for Humanities and Arts.\n\nThis exhibition or
 iginated on St. Helena Island\, SC during an artist residency in which the
  artists examined cultural identity and sustainability through environment
 al relationships. Galanis and Major are both from The Bahamas and now base
 d in Atlanta and New York City respectively. Both multimedia artists’ wo
 rk interrogates popular conceptions of place: Major’s through investigat
 ing “the relationship between self and place as a site of negotiation\,
 ” and Galanis’s by examining “the complexities of living in a place 
 shrouded in tourism’s ideal during the age of climate concerns."\n\nThe 
 artists’ work inspired by this residency explores notions of life in the
  Sea Islands of South Carolina and The Bahama Islands.\n\nAccompanying pro
 grams for "The Ties That Bind" will be in conjunction with UGA’s Spotlig
 ht on the Arts festival in November 2022.
GEO:33.964481;-83.376351
LOCATION:Lyndon House Arts Center
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Anina Major and Tamika Galanis
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uga.edu/event/exhibition_anina_major_and_tam
 ika_galanis
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
CATEGORIES:Ongoing
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260513T003031Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40818468671099
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20221022
DESCRIPTION:"The Ties That Bind: The Paradox of Cultural Survival amid Clim
 ate Events\," an exhibition of sculpture by Anina Major and photography by
  Tamika Galanis\, will be on display at the Lyndon House Art Center from S
 ept. 17 through Nov. 30. The exhibit is a partnership between the Lyndon H
 ouse and the Willson Center for Humanities and Arts.\n\nThis exhibition or
 iginated on St. Helena Island\, SC during an artist residency in which the
  artists examined cultural identity and sustainability through environment
 al relationships. Galanis and Major are both from The Bahamas and now base
 d in Atlanta and New York City respectively. Both multimedia artists’ wo
 rk interrogates popular conceptions of place: Major’s through investigat
 ing “the relationship between self and place as a site of negotiation\,
 ” and Galanis’s by examining “the complexities of living in a place 
 shrouded in tourism’s ideal during the age of climate concerns."\n\nThe 
 artists’ work inspired by this residency explores notions of life in the
  Sea Islands of South Carolina and The Bahama Islands.\n\nAccompanying pro
 grams for "The Ties That Bind" will be in conjunction with UGA’s Spotlig
 ht on the Arts festival in November 2022.
GEO:33.964481;-83.376351
LOCATION:Lyndon House Arts Center
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Anina Major and Tamika Galanis
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uga.edu/event/exhibition_anina_major_and_tam
 ika_galanis
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
CATEGORIES:Ongoing
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260513T003031Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40818468688514
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20221029
DESCRIPTION:"The Ties That Bind: The Paradox of Cultural Survival amid Clim
 ate Events\," an exhibition of sculpture by Anina Major and photography by
  Tamika Galanis\, will be on display at the Lyndon House Art Center from S
 ept. 17 through Nov. 30. The exhibit is a partnership between the Lyndon H
 ouse and the Willson Center for Humanities and Arts.\n\nThis exhibition or
 iginated on St. Helena Island\, SC during an artist residency in which the
  artists examined cultural identity and sustainability through environment
 al relationships. Galanis and Major are both from The Bahamas and now base
 d in Atlanta and New York City respectively. Both multimedia artists’ wo
 rk interrogates popular conceptions of place: Major’s through investigat
 ing “the relationship between self and place as a site of negotiation\,
 ” and Galanis’s by examining “the complexities of living in a place 
 shrouded in tourism’s ideal during the age of climate concerns."\n\nThe 
 artists’ work inspired by this residency explores notions of life in the
  Sea Islands of South Carolina and The Bahama Islands.\n\nAccompanying pro
 grams for "The Ties That Bind" will be in conjunction with UGA’s Spotlig
 ht on the Arts festival in November 2022.
GEO:33.964481;-83.376351
LOCATION:Lyndon House Arts Center
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Anina Major and Tamika Galanis
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uga.edu/event/exhibition_anina_major_and_tam
 ika_galanis
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
CATEGORIES:Ongoing
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260513T003031Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40818468704905
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20221105
DESCRIPTION:"The Ties That Bind: The Paradox of Cultural Survival amid Clim
 ate Events\," an exhibition of sculpture by Anina Major and photography by
  Tamika Galanis\, will be on display at the Lyndon House Art Center from S
 ept. 17 through Nov. 30. The exhibit is a partnership between the Lyndon H
 ouse and the Willson Center for Humanities and Arts.\n\nThis exhibition or
 iginated on St. Helena Island\, SC during an artist residency in which the
  artists examined cultural identity and sustainability through environment
 al relationships. Galanis and Major are both from The Bahamas and now base
 d in Atlanta and New York City respectively. Both multimedia artists’ wo
 rk interrogates popular conceptions of place: Major’s through investigat
 ing “the relationship between self and place as a site of negotiation\,
 ” and Galanis’s by examining “the complexities of living in a place 
 shrouded in tourism’s ideal during the age of climate concerns."\n\nThe 
 artists’ work inspired by this residency explores notions of life in the
  Sea Islands of South Carolina and The Bahama Islands.\n\nAccompanying pro
 grams for "The Ties That Bind" will be in conjunction with UGA’s Spotlig
 ht on the Arts festival in November 2022.
GEO:33.964481;-83.376351
LOCATION:Lyndon House Arts Center
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Anina Major and Tamika Galanis
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uga.edu/event/exhibition_anina_major_and_tam
 ika_galanis
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
CATEGORIES:Ongoing
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260513T003031Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40818468720272
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20221112
DESCRIPTION:"The Ties That Bind: The Paradox of Cultural Survival amid Clim
 ate Events\," an exhibition of sculpture by Anina Major and photography by
  Tamika Galanis\, will be on display at the Lyndon House Art Center from S
 ept. 17 through Nov. 30. The exhibit is a partnership between the Lyndon H
 ouse and the Willson Center for Humanities and Arts.\n\nThis exhibition or
 iginated on St. Helena Island\, SC during an artist residency in which the
  artists examined cultural identity and sustainability through environment
 al relationships. Galanis and Major are both from The Bahamas and now base
 d in Atlanta and New York City respectively. Both multimedia artists’ wo
 rk interrogates popular conceptions of place: Major’s through investigat
 ing “the relationship between self and place as a site of negotiation\,
 ” and Galanis’s by examining “the complexities of living in a place 
 shrouded in tourism’s ideal during the age of climate concerns."\n\nThe 
 artists’ work inspired by this residency explores notions of life in the
  Sea Islands of South Carolina and The Bahama Islands.\n\nAccompanying pro
 grams for "The Ties That Bind" will be in conjunction with UGA’s Spotlig
 ht on the Arts festival in November 2022.
GEO:33.964481;-83.376351
LOCATION:Lyndon House Arts Center
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Anina Major and Tamika Galanis
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uga.edu/event/exhibition_anina_major_and_tam
 ika_galanis
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
CATEGORIES:Ongoing
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260513T003032Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40818468735639
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20221119
DESCRIPTION:"The Ties That Bind: The Paradox of Cultural Survival amid Clim
 ate Events\," an exhibition of sculpture by Anina Major and photography by
  Tamika Galanis\, will be on display at the Lyndon House Art Center from S
 ept. 17 through Nov. 30. The exhibit is a partnership between the Lyndon H
 ouse and the Willson Center for Humanities and Arts.\n\nThis exhibition or
 iginated on St. Helena Island\, SC during an artist residency in which the
  artists examined cultural identity and sustainability through environment
 al relationships. Galanis and Major are both from The Bahamas and now base
 d in Atlanta and New York City respectively. Both multimedia artists’ wo
 rk interrogates popular conceptions of place: Major’s through investigat
 ing “the relationship between self and place as a site of negotiation\,
 ” and Galanis’s by examining “the complexities of living in a place 
 shrouded in tourism’s ideal during the age of climate concerns."\n\nThe 
 artists’ work inspired by this residency explores notions of life in the
  Sea Islands of South Carolina and The Bahama Islands.\n\nAccompanying pro
 grams for "The Ties That Bind" will be in conjunction with UGA’s Spotlig
 ht on the Arts festival in November 2022.
GEO:33.964481;-83.376351
LOCATION:Lyndon House Arts Center
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Anina Major and Tamika Galanis
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uga.edu/event/exhibition_anina_major_and_tam
 ika_galanis
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
CATEGORIES:Ongoing
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260513T003032Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_40818468752030
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20221126
DESCRIPTION:"The Ties That Bind: The Paradox of Cultural Survival amid Clim
 ate Events\," an exhibition of sculpture by Anina Major and photography by
  Tamika Galanis\, will be on display at the Lyndon House Art Center from S
 ept. 17 through Nov. 30. The exhibit is a partnership between the Lyndon H
 ouse and the Willson Center for Humanities and Arts.\n\nThis exhibition or
 iginated on St. Helena Island\, SC during an artist residency in which the
  artists examined cultural identity and sustainability through environment
 al relationships. Galanis and Major are both from The Bahamas and now base
 d in Atlanta and New York City respectively. Both multimedia artists’ wo
 rk interrogates popular conceptions of place: Major’s through investigat
 ing “the relationship between self and place as a site of negotiation\,
 ” and Galanis’s by examining “the complexities of living in a place 
 shrouded in tourism’s ideal during the age of climate concerns."\n\nThe 
 artists’ work inspired by this residency explores notions of life in the
  Sea Islands of South Carolina and The Bahama Islands.\n\nAccompanying pro
 grams for "The Ties That Bind" will be in conjunction with UGA’s Spotlig
 ht on the Arts festival in November 2022.
GEO:33.964481;-83.376351
LOCATION:Lyndon House Arts Center
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Anina Major and Tamika Galanis
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.uga.edu/event/exhibition_anina_major_and_tam
 ika_galanis
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
CATEGORIES:Ongoing
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
