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Main Events Calendar

September2 - Tue^5:30 p.m.MUHS Lecture: Alison Luchs - "Bringing the Masters Home"
Maier Museum of Art
"Bringing the masters home: Michelangelo, Raphael and Leonardo on the Renaissance table" Alison Luchs, National Gallery of Art's Curator of Early European Sculpture and Deputy Head Department of Sculpture and Decorative will discuss ways maiolica artists adapted major works of Renaissance and even ancient art in their work. FREE and open to the public.
6 - Sat^3 p.m.Guest Artist/Faculty Recital: Monica Fosnaugh, oboe, and Scott Strong, horn, with Emily Yap Chua, piano
Wimberly Recital Hall, Presser Hall
The Guest Artist Series opens the 2025-26 season with esteemed musicians from the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. Monica Fosnaugh, English Horn with the Detroit Symphony since 2012, and Scott Strong, Third Horn with the Detroit Symphony since 2014, join with Randolph College professor Emily Yap Chua for an afternoon of chamber music for oboe, French horn, and piano. The program includes works by French composer Francis Poulenc, Belgian composer Jane Vignery, and German composers Robert Kahn and Carl Reinecke. Admission is free.
4 p.m.Women's Soccer vs William Peace University
WildCat Stadium, Athletics and Dance Center
7 p.m.Men' Soccer vs William Peace University
WildCat Stadium, Athletics and Dance Center
7 - Sun^2 p.m.Artist Talk – Siobhán Byrns
Maier Museum of Art
Artist Talk – Siobhán Byrns | Artist Siobhán Byrns will discuss her exhibition, "The Green Ribbon: Chlorophyll Prints by Siobhán Byrns". Byrns’ ephemeral chlorophyll prints on Hosta leaves critique the romanticized ideals imposed on women highlighting the weight of expectations they bear and the difficulty of establishing trust in a world where boundaries are too often ignored or violated and their existence as replaceable or disposable. Reception. FREE and open to the general public.
10 - Wed^5 p.m.Pearl S. Buck Award Ceremony
Smith Hall Theatre, Smith Memorial Building
Pearl S. Buck Award Ceremony: Kim Phuc Phan Thi Join us as Randolph College honors Kim Phuc Phan Thi, the “Napalm Girl” whose harrowing image became an enduring symbol of the Vietnam War. Phuc will receive the 2025-2026 Pearl S. Buck Award in recognition of her lifelong advocacy for children and victims of conflict. The ceremony will take place on Wednesday, Sept. 10, at 5 p.m. in Smith Hall Theatre, followed by a book signing. Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer Nick Ut, who captured The Terror of War, will also be in attendance. Free and open to the public.
7 p.m.Men' Soccer vs Mary Baldwin
WildCat Stadium, Athletics and Dance Center
12 - Fri^3 p.m.Women's Volleyball vs Clinton College
Gym, Athletics and Dance Center
4:30 p.m.Men's Tennis vs SVU
Tennis Courts, Athletics and Dance Center
13 - Sat^10 a.m.Science Saturday - Graph Theory and Mazes
Ethyl Center - Martin 309 PC LAB, Martin Science Building
Science + Art Saturdays are hands-on interactive college labs free and open to all high school students. This week we will explore efficient ways of navigating through networks and put our ideas to the test solving problems related to mazes. With Professor Ordower from the Department of Mathematics and Computer Science. For more information and registration, please visit https://www.randolphcollege.edu/admission/visit/science-art-saturdays/.
11 a.m.Women's Volleyball vs Columbia College, Hood College
Gym, Athletics and Dance Center
2 p.m.Women's Soccer vs Regent University
WildCat Stadium, Athletics and Dance Center
14 - Sun^10 a.m.Women's Basketball Elite Prospect Camp
Gym, Athletics and Dance Center
17 - Wed^6:30 p.m.Women's Volleyball vs U of L
Gym, Athletics and Dance Center
19 - Fri^6:30 p.m.Women's Volleyball vs Washington & Lee
Gym, Athletics and Dance Center
20 - Sat^10 a.m.Science Saturday - It's not easy being green (synthesis of paint pigments)
Ethyl Center - Martin 309 PC LAB, Martin Science Building
Science + Art Saturdays are hands-on interactive college labs free and open to all high school students. Registration is required. Have you ever wondered how artists make paint? Or where pigments come from, especially in the days before artist supply stores? In this session, we’ll synthesize the green pigment malachite and talk about its use in oil, acrylic, and tempura paint. We’ll mix our pigment to make each type of paint and compare their uses in painting. This week's session is with Professor Fab from the Department of Chemistry. For more information and registration, please visit https://www.randolphcollege.edu/admission/visit/science-art-saturdays/.
11 a.m.Women's Volleyball vs Bridgewater
Gym, Athletics and Dance Center
2 p.m.Volunteer Recruitment Event
Maier Museum of Art
Learn ways you can assist your favorite Lynchburg art museum. Enjoy a behind-the-scenes tour. Save your seat for this free, no-obligation event by emailing museum@randolphcollege.edu.
4 p.m.Women's Soccer vs Salem College
WildCat Stadium, Athletics and Dance Center
7 p.m.Men' Soccer vs HSC
WildCat Stadium, Athletics and Dance Center
21 - Sun^12:30 p.m.Men's Basketball Prospect Camp
Gym, Athletics and Dance Center
23 - Tue^6:30 p.m.Women's Volleyball vs St. Marys
Gym, Athletics and Dance Center
24 - Wed^12 a.m.Men's Tennis vs Ferrum (Scrimmage)
Tennis Courts, Athletics and Dance Center
27 - Sat^11 a.m.Women's Volleyball vs PItt Bradford
Gym, Athletics and Dance Center
4 p.m.Women's Soccer vs EMU
WildCat Stadium, Athletics and Dance Center
7 p.m.Men' Soccer vs Bridgewater College
WildCat Stadium, Athletics and Dance Center
October1 - Wed^6:30 p.m.Women's Volleyball vs Guilford
Gym, Athletics and Dance Center
7 p.m.Men' Soccer @ University of Lynchburg
University of Lynchburg
7 p.m.Women's Soccer vs SBC
WildCat Stadium, Athletics and Dance Center
2 - Thu^5:30 p.m.Lecture - Beyond the Absence: Recovering the Architectural Imprints of Slavery
Leggett 537, Harold G. Leggett Building
Kathleen Powers Conti ’11, Assistant Professor of History, Florida State University, will examine the architectural history of slavery at Virginia's Berkeley Plantation, showing that while historic preservation conserved many of the buildings, it also obscured the lives of the hundreds of enslaved people who once lived, worked, and died there. Reception to follow. Sponsored by Randolph College’s Museum and Heritage Studies Program.
3 - Fri^4 p.m.2025 Randolph College Greek Play Sophocles’ Antigone
Dell, Outdoor Areas
The 2025 Randolph College Greek Play is Sophocles’ Antigone, which pits the title character against Creon, the current ruler of Thebes. Antigone’s brother Polynices has died while attacking Thebes to regain the throne from his brother Eteocles, who also dies in the conflict. Creon decrees that Eteocles may be given a proper burial, but that Polynices must be left for the birds and dogs, since he traitorously raised an army against his hometown. Antigone defies the order and buries her brother, and Creon condemns her to death. Their actions set in motion many unintended consequences. The play dramatizes the conflicts we still have between public and private, male and female, law and religion, state and family. Our production of Antigone in 2000 revived the Greek Play tradition, and we’ll be celebrating a quarter century of the renewed series in 2025! More information will be at randolphcollege.edu/cad/25th.. Directed by Amy R. Cohen, Admission is Free Rain Location will be Houston Memorial Chapel
6:30 p.m.Women's Volleyball vs Shenandoah
Gym, Athletics and Dance Center

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