the guide FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2016
70 Years of Music TOBY HUNG
Hoya Staff Writer
T
he brick walls of Red Square are plastered with minimalist posters featuring a cherry, a tree and an axe. Dozens of alumni, from the recently employed to the retirement-ready, are planning their return to Georgetown. And in a two-story house beside The Tombs, an all-male, college-aged a cappella group is rehearsing barbershop tunes from the 1920s. In its 43rd iteration, the Georgetown Chimes’ annual Cherry Tree Massacre takes place in Gaston Hall tonight, tomorrow, next Friday and Feb. 27. This year also marks an important milestone for the Chimes, as the group behind the largest collegiate a cappella festival on the East Coast celebrates its 70th anniversary. See CHIMES, B2
LEFT: COURTESY CONNOR JOSEPH, RIGHT: CHRIS BIEN/THE HOYA
THIS WEEK FOOD & DRINK
FEATURE
Against the Stream
Ralph Wickiser exhibition opens in Spagnuolo Art Gallery
The Little Beet
Fast-casual eatery The Little Beet, which opened in Dupont Circle in November, features 100 percent gluten-free dishes. B5
MOVIE REVIEW
Hail, Caesar!
The Coen brothers join forces with an all-star cast in this insider’s look at the Hollywood studio system in the 1950s. B6
ALBUM REVIEW
Sia
The seventh album by Australian songstress Sia is a mixed bag of mediocre tracks. B7
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CAROLINE KENNEALLY/THE HOYA
Fourteen paintings by 20th century American abstract artist Ralph Wickiser, including his symbolic depictions of natural scenes and landscapes, are on display in the Spagnuolo Art Gallery in the Edmund A. Walsh Building from Jan. 20 to April 3.
MADISON STINGRAY Hoya Staff Writer
Step inside the Spagnuolo Art Gallery in the Edmund A. Walsh Building and behold an autumn forest, replete with bare trees, a dark stream lined with boulders and a ground coated with orange leaves almost like water itself.
For students native to New York, the scene offers a nostalgic taste of home, while for others, it is a trip into the upstate woods that inspired the landscape and other canvas experiments of acclaimed abstract artist Ralph Wickiser (1910- 1998). Wickiser gained the attention of the American art world for his
unique method of depicting the natural world. “Ralph Wickiser was not a bluechip artist, but one who was able to still survive and thrive,” Spagnuolo Art Gallery Director Evan Reed said. There is indeed a modesty and subtlety to the exhibit, but the startling impact of the series’ strength is much like the na-
ture depicted in Wickiser’s pieces. The Spagnuolo Art Gallery is small and intimate, and, like Wickiser, can often be overlooked. The space’s silence wrestles with the movement and liveliness of the paintings. Wickiser’s landscapes fill the room, See WICKISER, B3