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Art 4 UConn

FebruaryFebruary 11, 12:15 PM
RecitalsPlus: A performance by an advanced music student in the School of Fine Arts
February 14, 2 PM
Sunday Films: Neo-noir / Kiss Kiss Bang Bang (2005)
February 14, 5 PM
Music on a Sunday Afternoon
February 18, 12:15 PM
Gallery Talk: The Collection Connection. Museum Director Dr. Thomas Bruhn will talk about 19th-century Japanese color woodcuts from the collection.
February 21, 2 PM
Sunday Films: Neo-noir / Deep Cover (1992)
February 25, 12:15 PM
RecitalsPlus: A performance by an advanced music student in the School of Fine Arts
February 28, 2 PM
Sunday Films: Neo-noir / Red Rock West (1992)
MarchMarch 4, 12:15 PM
Gallery Talk: From Amazing Stories to Weird Tales
Assistant Curator Eve Perry
March 7, 2 PM
Sunday Films: Neo-noir / Memento (2000)
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The William Benton Museum of Art is a member of the Connecticut Art Trail, a partnership of fifteen world-class museums and historic sites across the state. Click here to sign-up for the Art Trail’s e-newsletter, announcing updates on packages, events and exhibitions at member museums.

Current Exhibitions
June 6 – August 9
Punch & Judy: Handpuppets, Politics & Humor Punch and Judy have come to symbolize the world of puppet theater for many audiences on both sides of the Atlantic. Known for their comic antics and Punch’s ever-present club, these puppets at first glance might appear to be benign and colorful entertainment for children. But a closer look at these two characters and their puppet brethren reveals a complex and often contradictory world of comedy, mayhem, sex, violence, and politics.

Punch & Judy: Handpuppets, Politics & Humor explores the world of these classic characters and related realms of handpuppets and satire. It includes Punch and Judy handpuppet sets as well as Guignol and Kasperl puppets from France and Germany, and the Punch and Judy set used by the famed creator of “queer theater,” Charles Ludlam. In addition, there are handpuppets created by Rufus Rose to satirize Connecticut politicians, which Rose created while he was a Republican State Legislator and which he performed in the Connecticut State House.

This exhibition was curated by Ballard Institute and Museum of Puppetry director John Bell, with graduate assistants Stefano Brancato and Joseph Therrien.

Display All Current Exhibition