Join us on the Hill for a festival for all!
What's Happening Upcoming Events
By Date
-
This program will allow participants to experience how the kinds of questions we ask can impact and shift a conversation — and to consider the impacts/purposes of different kinds of questions so they can be intentional about the kinds of questions they ask.
-
Join former varsity athlete (volleyball) Haley Witschey '20 to learn more about her time working in NYC at AlphaSights and why other Kenyon athletes have excelled at the firm.
-
Thomas Ham '25 will present his senior capstone for the music major.
-
In honor of its 10th anniversary, a special service of rededication will take place Friday, Sept. 20, at the Rothenberg Hillel House. All are welcome to the brief service, to be followed by a reception.
-
The Kenyon community is invited to celebrate Mid-Autumn Festival, a traditional festival in Chinese culture.
-
Learn more about the breadth of opportunities for working in the arts at The Gund’s second annual Career in the Arts Day. Join a remarkable panel of Kenyon alumnae as they discuss how to prepare on the Hill and how to succeed later.
-
Kenyon welcomes cellist Anita Graef for a performance in Brandi Recital Hall.
-
Join Saad Nadeem '23 and Hamza Saleem '22 for a networking dinner to learn more about Morningstar's Development Program and information about internship opportunities.
-
Join economics major Rollins Heath '25 as he shares his internship in data and analytics at Morgan Stanley.
-
Join faculty, staff and students over lunch for low-key and low-stakes conversations in a setting that is stress-free and comfortable.
-
Resume Labs are interactive, group appointments where Career Development Office staff work with you to create immediate and tangible improvements to your resume. There is no presentation component to these sessions, drop in for as long as you want.
-
Students who participated in our summer research program share their work over the summer.
-
As The Gund’s inaugural atrium commission, "This Land," a site-specific installation by French-Anishinaabe artist Caroline Monnet, speaks about indigenous cultural identity in relation to the land. Monnet takes influence from her Anishinaabe cultural heritage, drawing from traditional designs found on birch bark baskets and beadwork to create the intricate patterns covering the glass panels of the atrium.
-
In response to history and the present, "Light of Freedom" reflects the despair and the exultation of a turbulent period of pandemic and protest. The project is a newly commissioned outdoor sculpture.
-
Spanning from the 1970s to the present day, this exhibition reflects on American artist Ming Smith’s early and formative years traveling in Europe and examines how these experiences have shaped her practice and continue to influence her more recent work.
-
Balka’s work is marked by its simplicity and the space he leaves between things. The artist’s body and studio are often his starting points, informing the scale and materiality of his works, which span ash, felt, salt, hair, soap, wood, steel and concrete. The human body’s relationship to the built environment is always present, which reverberates as visitors experience his work.
-
Each of Kjartansson's videos is a multi-layered exploration of human experience. By placing his characters in settings that defy expectations and challenge conventions, he invites audiences to reconsider their perceptions of reality and the mundane.
-
The Gund presents an exhibition featuring artworks from the collections of our alumni. This curated selection introduces new voices and perspectives, enriching understanding and appreciation of modern and contemporary art.
-
Ondak blurs the boundaries between art and everyday life to explore the gap in between. This work counts on the spontaneous participation of visitors entering the gallery space. At the intersection of public art and site-specific installation, Ondak’s piece engages everyone through the mundane and yet familiar exercise of being measured (height) with the name and date of their visit inscribed directly on the gallery walls.
-
Kenyon's Generosity Project is accepting donations of books during the month of September to distribute in partnership with International Book Project.