Schedule List

chautauqua 2022 schedule

by Roma Flatley Published 2 years ago Updated 1 year ago
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Chautauqua Festival Schedule. We are so excited to welcome you back to the park for the 2022 Chautauqua Festival! Friday June 17. Saturday June 18. Sunday June 19. Monday June 20. Tuesday June 21. Wednesday June 22. Thursday June 23. Friday June 24. Saturday June 25. Contact Us. P.O. Box 911

Full Answer

Will there be a Chautauqua Festival in 2021?

CHECKOUT THE FULL LISTING OF EACH DAY'S ACTIVITIES HERE! We are so excited to welcome you back to the park for the 2021 Chautauqua Festival. We have made a few changes to this year's schedule, but we're sure to have a great time!

What is Chautauqua?

Chautauqua as a community celebrates, encourages and studies the arts and treats them as integral to all of learning. With symphony, opera, theater, dance, visual arts and a renowned music school, Chautauqua produces an “ecstatic mix” of programming that can be found nowhere else.

Why choose Chautauqua community house?

During Colorado’s chillier months, you will feel right at home in the beautiful Community House, sometimes called Chautauqua’s “living room.” Community House events are a favorite amongst audiences looking to experience smaller concerts, forums, films and educational programs in a more intimate setting. Select date.

How many people visit Chautauqua every summer?

Every summer, over the course of nine weeks, more than 100,000 people visit Chautauqua Institution in search of respite, community and personal growth. And every summer, they find it.

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Week One: June 25–July 2

In the summer of 2022, more than a year into President Joe Biden’s administration, we offer a “check-in” on the state of U.S. foreign policy and diplomacy, while looking historically to America’s role in the world.

Week Two: July 2–9

Since the middle of the 20th century, study after study suggests that humans have become more and more disconnected from the nature surrounding us.

Week Three: July 9–16

Human rights have long been held as foundational, moral principles protected by national and international law. In this week, Chautauqua looks to the future of human rights both abroad and at home.

Week Four: July 16–23

We live our lives swimming in a vast sea of information; what will wash up on the future’s shores and be deemed our history? When data is stored in the cloud rather than compiled in physical files, when we send emails and tweets rather than letters, how do the records of today become primary sources tomorrow? There are more ways to record history than ever before, but how can those records live in a useful way for the historians of the future — or, with everyone having the technology, and thus the capability, to be their own historian, their own librarian, will a need to study history as a formal vocation even exist? Beyond the logistics of such questions, broader issues are at play: Who are the gatekeepers of our stories, and who do we trust to be stewards of our lives and memories?.

Week Five: July 23–30

In the first months of 2021, hundreds of bills have been introduced in state legislatures aimed at restricting, expanding and protecting voting access for millions of Americans.

Week Six: July 30–August 6

What happens to us and our world after the sun goes down each day? From our homes and cities to flora and fauna, each night brings with it a markedly different landscape than the daylit one that preceded it.

Week Seven: August 6–13

What is the 21st-century American home? Home ownership has long been considered part and parcel of the American Dream, but trends are rapidly shifting: More and more homes are multi-generational, rentals are up and home ownership is down, and gentrification persists while the nation’s unhoused population is increasing.

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