More from Events Calendar
- May 75:30 PMThe Mindful Brain: New insights into the effects of meditation and mindfulness on brain healthThe Mindful BrainJoin us to explore new insights into the effects of meditation and mindfulness on brain healthFeaturing:Yongey Mingyur Rinpoche Tibetan Buddhist master and leader of the Tergar Meditation Community Seventh incarnation of Yongey Mingyur DorjeRichard Davidson William James and Vilas Professor of Psychology and Psychiatry, University of Wisconsin–Madison Founder and Director, Center for Healthy MindsJohn Gabrieli Grover Hermann Professor of Health Sciences and Technology, MIT Investigator, McGovern Institute and Professor, Brain and Cognitive Sciences, MITSusan Whitfield-Gabrieli Tommy Fuss Professor of Precision Psychiatry, Massachusetts General HospitalProgram is free and open to the public, but registration is required. Register here: https://forms.gle/Ms1tXa7XpJMhpJKD7
- May 76:00 PMNot Here, Not Now: Speculative Thought, Impossibility, and the Design ImaginationJoin us at the MIT Museum as we welcome award-winning designers Anthony Dunne and Fiona Raby to discuss their new book, Not Here, Not Now, in conversation with John Ochsendorf, Founding Director of MIT Morningside Academy of Design. The event will be moderated by MIT Museum Director Michael John Gorman.When reality fails us, what can designers do? Question design's relationship to reality, as Anthony Dunne and Fiona Raby do, in this exhilarating, yet thoughtful, journey to the edges of science, philosophy, and literature to find new ways of thinking about the possible -- and about the meaning, function, and place of design in that speculative world of "not here, not now." A conceptual travelogue of sorts, Not Here, Not Now brings together words, images, and objects that capture, in design form, some of the ideas encountered along the way. Itself a design experiment, the richly illustrated book explores ways to bring these ideas into conversation with objects through imagined archives, libraries, glossaries, taxonomies, lists, tales, and essays.Copies of Not Here, Not Now will be available for purchase onsite from the MIT Press Bookstore.Presented in collaboration with MIT Morningside Academy of Design (MIT MAD).$5
- May 78:00 PMThe Sixth Annual MIT Playwrights LabThe Sixth Annual MIT Playwrights LabA weeks-long festival of new student plays from Senior Lecturer Ken Urban’s Course 21T.355 workshopped and performed by professional actors and directors.SCHEDULE OF STAGED READINGSWhat Remains of the Sun by Sofia Galiana Wednesday, May 7 at 8pmAll readings will take place in Building W97-160Free and open to the publicThe MIT Playwrights Lab is made possible thanks to the generous funding of the Richard Price Rudy (1968) and Robert Paul Rudy (1937) Memorial Fund.
- May 81:00 AMBaseball vs. Emerson CollegeTime: 3:30 PMLocation: Cambridge, MA
- May 810:00 AMAll Ages Play Group at Site 4All kids from newborn age to 3.5 years old are welcome! You can bring siblings as well.It's a chance for kids to have fun while parents can chat, share parenting tips, and socialize.Please register if you plan to attend the group. Contact Maria at mwiegandl@udd.cl if you have any questions.This group is sponsored by the Executive Committees of Westgate and the Graduate Tower at Site 4, and MIT Spouses & Partners Connect, a dedicated network for the significant others of MIT students, postdocs, staff and faculty who have relocated to the Boston area.
- May 810:00 AMRefracted Histories: 19th-c. Islamic Windows as a Prism into MIT’s Past, Present, and FutureFebruary 26, 2025 - July 17, 2025Hidden within MIT’s Distinctive Collections, many architectural elements from the earliest days of the Institute’s architecture program still survive as part of the Rotch Art Collection. Among the artworks that conservators salvaged was a set of striking windows of gypsum and stained-glass, dating to the late 18th- to 19th c. Ottoman Empire. This exhibition illuminates the life of these historic windows, tracing their refracted histories from Egypt to MIT, their ongoing conservation, and the cutting-edge research they still prompt.The Maihaugen Gallery (14N-130) is open Monday through Thursday, 10am - 4pm, excluding Institute holidays.