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VERSION:2.0
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CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
X-WR-CALNAME:Akimbo
X-WR-TIMEZONE:Eastern Time (US & Canada)
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169097594
DTSTART:20250821T140000Z
DTEND:20250822T000000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169098619
DTSTART:20250822T140000Z
DTEND:20250822T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169099644
DTSTART:20250823T140000Z
DTEND:20250823T200000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169100669
DTSTART:20250826T140000Z
DTEND:20250826T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169101694
DTSTART:20250827T140000Z
DTEND:20250827T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169102719
DTSTART:20250828T140000Z
DTEND:20250829T000000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169103744
DTSTART:20250829T140000Z
DTEND:20250829T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169104769
DTSTART:20250830T140000Z
DTEND:20250830T200000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169105794
DTSTART:20250902T140000Z
DTEND:20250902T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169106819
DTSTART:20250903T140000Z
DTEND:20250903T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169107844
DTSTART:20250904T140000Z
DTEND:20250905T000000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169108869
DTSTART:20250905T140000Z
DTEND:20250905T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169108870
DTSTART:20250906T140000Z
DTEND:20250906T200000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169110919
DTSTART:20250909T140000Z
DTEND:20250909T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169111944
DTSTART:20250910T140000Z
DTEND:20250910T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169112969
DTSTART:20250911T140000Z
DTEND:20250912T000000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169113994
DTSTART:20250912T140000Z
DTEND:20250912T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169115019
DTSTART:20250913T140000Z
DTEND:20250913T200000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169116044
DTSTART:20250916T140000Z
DTEND:20250916T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169117069
DTSTART:20250917T140000Z
DTEND:20250917T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169118094
DTSTART:20250918T140000Z
DTEND:20250919T000000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169119119
DTSTART:20250919T140000Z
DTEND:20250919T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169119120
DTSTART:20250920T140000Z
DTEND:20250920T200000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169120145
DTSTART:20250923T140000Z
DTEND:20250923T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169122194
DTSTART:20250924T140000Z
DTEND:20250924T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169122195
DTSTART:20250925T140000Z
DTEND:20250926T000000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169123220
DTSTART:20250926T140000Z
DTEND:20250926T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169124245
DTSTART:20250927T140000Z
DTEND:20250927T200000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169125270
DTSTART:20250930T140000Z
DTEND:20250930T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169126295
DTSTART:20251001T140000Z
DTEND:20251001T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169127320
DTSTART:20251002T140000Z
DTEND:20251003T000000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169128345
DTSTART:20251003T140000Z
DTEND:20251003T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169128346
DTSTART:20251004T140000Z
DTEND:20251004T200000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169129371
DTSTART:20251007T140000Z
DTEND:20251007T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169130396
DTSTART:20251008T140000Z
DTEND:20251008T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169131421
DTSTART:20251009T140000Z
DTEND:20251010T000000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169132446
DTSTART:20251010T140000Z
DTEND:20251010T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169133471
DTSTART:20251011T140000Z
DTEND:20251011T200000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169134496
DTSTART:20251014T140000Z
DTEND:20251014T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169135521
DTSTART:20251015T140000Z
DTEND:20251015T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169136546
DTSTART:20251016T140000Z
DTEND:20251017T000000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169137571
DTSTART:20251017T140000Z
DTEND:20251017T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169138596
DTSTART:20251018T140000Z
DTEND:20251018T200000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169138597
DTSTART:20251021T140000Z
DTEND:20251021T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169139622
DTSTART:20251022T140000Z
DTEND:20251022T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169140647
DTSTART:20251023T140000Z
DTEND:20251024T000000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169141672
DTSTART:20251024T140000Z
DTEND:20251024T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169142697
DTSTART:20251025T140000Z
DTEND:20251025T200000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169143722
DTSTART:20251028T140000Z
DTEND:20251028T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205140Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169144747
DTSTART:20251029T140000Z
DTEND:20251029T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169145772
DTSTART:20251030T140000Z
DTEND:20251031T000000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169146797
DTSTART:20251031T140000Z
DTEND:20251031T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169147822
DTSTART:20251101T140000Z
DTEND:20251101T200000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169148847
DTSTART:20251104T150000Z
DTEND:20251104T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169149872
DTSTART:20251105T150000Z
DTEND:20251105T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169150897
DTSTART:20251106T150000Z
DTEND:20251107T010000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169152946
DTSTART:20251107T150000Z
DTEND:20251107T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169153971
DTSTART:20251108T150000Z
DTEND:20251108T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169154996
DTSTART:20251111T150000Z
DTEND:20251111T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169156021
DTSTART:20251112T150000Z
DTEND:20251112T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169157046
DTSTART:20251113T150000Z
DTEND:20251114T010000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169158071
DTSTART:20251114T150000Z
DTEND:20251114T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169160120
DTSTART:20251115T150000Z
DTEND:20251115T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169161145
DTSTART:20251118T150000Z
DTEND:20251118T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169162170
DTSTART:20251119T150000Z
DTEND:20251119T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169163195
DTSTART:20251120T150000Z
DTEND:20251121T010000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169164220
DTSTART:20251121T150000Z
DTEND:20251121T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169165245
DTSTART:20251122T150000Z
DTEND:20251122T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169166270
DTSTART:20251125T150000Z
DTEND:20251125T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169167295
DTSTART:20251126T150000Z
DTEND:20251126T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169168320
DTSTART:20251127T150000Z
DTEND:20251128T010000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169169345
DTSTART:20251128T150000Z
DTEND:20251128T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169169346
DTSTART:20251129T150000Z
DTEND:20251129T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169170371
DTSTART:20251202T150000Z
DTEND:20251202T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169171396
DTSTART:20251203T150000Z
DTEND:20251203T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169172421
DTSTART:20251204T150000Z
DTEND:20251205T010000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169173446
DTSTART:20251205T150000Z
DTEND:20251205T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169174471
DTSTART:20251206T150000Z
DTEND:20251206T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169175496
DTSTART:20251209T150000Z
DTEND:20251209T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169176521
DTSTART:20251210T150000Z
DTEND:20251210T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169177546
DTSTART:20251211T150000Z
DTEND:20251212T010000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169178571
DTSTART:20251212T150000Z
DTEND:20251212T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169179596
DTSTART:20251213T150000Z
DTEND:20251213T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169180621
DTSTART:20251216T150000Z
DTEND:20251216T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169181646
DTSTART:20251217T150000Z
DTEND:20251217T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169182671
DTSTART:20251218T150000Z
DTEND:20251219T010000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169183696
DTSTART:20251219T150000Z
DTEND:20251219T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169184721
DTSTART:20251220T150000Z
DTEND:20251220T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169184722
DTSTART:20251223T150000Z
DTEND:20251223T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169185747
DTSTART:20251224T150000Z
DTEND:20251224T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169186772
DTSTART:20251225T150000Z
DTEND:20251226T010000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169187797
DTSTART:20251226T150000Z
DTEND:20251226T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169188822
DTSTART:20251227T150000Z
DTEND:20251227T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169189847
DTSTART:20251230T150000Z
DTEND:20251230T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169190872
DTSTART:20251231T150000Z
DTEND:20251231T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169190873
DTSTART:20260101T150000Z
DTEND:20260102T010000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169191898
DTSTART:20260102T150000Z
DTEND:20260102T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169192923
DTSTART:20260103T150000Z
DTEND:20260103T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169193948
DTSTART:20260106T150000Z
DTEND:20260106T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169194973
DTSTART:20260107T150000Z
DTEND:20260107T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169195998
DTSTART:20260108T150000Z
DTEND:20260109T010000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169195999
DTSTART:20260109T150000Z
DTEND:20260109T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169197024
DTSTART:20260110T150000Z
DTEND:20260110T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169198049
DTSTART:20260113T150000Z
DTEND:20260113T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169199074
DTSTART:20260114T150000Z
DTEND:20260114T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169200099
DTSTART:20260115T150000Z
DTEND:20260116T010000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169201124
DTSTART:20260116T150000Z
DTEND:20260116T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169201125
DTSTART:20260117T150000Z
DTEND:20260117T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169202150
DTSTART:20260120T150000Z
DTEND:20260120T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169203175
DTSTART:20260121T150000Z
DTEND:20260121T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169204200
DTSTART:20260122T150000Z
DTEND:20260123T010000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169205225
DTSTART:20260123T150000Z
DTEND:20260123T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169206250
DTSTART:20260124T150000Z
DTEND:20260124T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169207275
DTSTART:20260127T150000Z
DTEND:20260127T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169208300
DTSTART:20260128T150000Z
DTEND:20260128T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169209325
DTSTART:20260129T150000Z
DTEND:20260130T010000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169210350
DTSTART:20260130T150000Z
DTEND:20260130T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169211375
DTSTART:20260131T150000Z
DTEND:20260131T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169212400
DTSTART:20260203T150000Z
DTEND:20260203T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169213425
DTSTART:20260204T150000Z
DTEND:20260204T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169214450
DTSTART:20260205T150000Z
DTEND:20260206T010000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169215475
DTSTART:20260206T150000Z
DTEND:20260206T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169216500
DTSTART:20260207T150000Z
DTEND:20260207T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169217525
DTSTART:20260210T150000Z
DTEND:20260210T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169218550
DTSTART:20260211T150000Z
DTEND:20260211T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169219575
DTSTART:20260212T150000Z
DTEND:20260213T010000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169220600
DTSTART:20260213T150000Z
DTEND:20260213T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169221625
DTSTART:20260214T150000Z
DTEND:20260214T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169222650
DTSTART:20260217T150000Z
DTEND:20260217T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169223675
DTSTART:20260218T150000Z
DTEND:20260218T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169224700
DTSTART:20260219T150000Z
DTEND:20260220T010000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169225725
DTSTART:20260220T150000Z
DTEND:20260220T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169226750
DTSTART:20260221T150000Z
DTEND:20260221T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169227775
DTSTART:20260224T150000Z
DTEND:20260224T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169226752
DTSTART:20260225T150000Z
DTEND:20260225T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169227777
DTSTART:20260226T150000Z
DTEND:20260227T010000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169228802
DTSTART:20260227T150000Z
DTEND:20260227T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169229827
DTSTART:20260228T150000Z
DTEND:20260228T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169230852
DTSTART:20260303T150000Z
DTEND:20260303T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169231877
DTSTART:20260304T150000Z
DTEND:20260304T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169232902
DTSTART:20260305T150000Z
DTEND:20260306T010000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169232903
DTSTART:20260306T150000Z
DTEND:20260306T220000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169233928
DTSTART:20260307T150000Z
DTEND:20260307T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169234953
DTSTART:20260310T140000Z
DTEND:20260310T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169235978
DTSTART:20260311T140000Z
DTEND:20260311T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169237003
DTSTART:20260312T140000Z
DTEND:20260313T000000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169238028
DTSTART:20260313T140000Z
DTEND:20260313T210000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T205141Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50895169239053
DTSTART:20260314T140000Z
DTEND:20260314T200000Z
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of Fine Arts is proud to present Akimbo\, the first 
 solo exhibition by Florida State University alumna\, Zoë Charlton\, in he
 r hometown\, Tallahassee. Bringing together personal history and collectiv
 e memory\, the exhibition reflects on the ways in which identity is shaped
  through place. In Akimbo\, Charlton reveals how memories and experiences 
 accumulate across time\, layering themselves within the Tallahassee landsc
 ape.  \n\nAt the heart of the exhibition is Paul Russell Road\, a reimag
 ined and meticulously crafted half-scale model of Charlton’s family home
  in Tallahassee. This upended house functions as a record of memory\, an a
 rchitectural tool that follows a blueprint informed by lived experience an
 d historical recollection within this Southern landscape. In dialogue with
  the sculpture is Smokey Hallow\, an animated film that evokes the vibranc
 y and loss of one of Tallahassee’s historic Black American neighborhoods
  during mid-20th-century urban renewal. Through evocative motion refer
 encing the construction of homes\, accompanied by natural and industrial s
 ounds\, Charlton develops a parallel record across different media. Togeth
 er\, these works operate as material and immaterial archives\, mapping the
  intertwined histories of people\, the built environment\, and the landsca
 pes that hold them.  
GEO:30.444141;-84.29018
LOCATION:Museum of Fine Arts \, FAB250
SUMMARY:Akimbo
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.fsu.edu/event/akimbo
CATEGORIES:Arts/Entertainment
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
