David Peck Improvisational Orchestra
118 Elliot and Sparkles PresentTurbulence Orchestra & Sub-Units Perform ‘Crescendo of the Tempest’12 April 2025 – 7:30 pm March 25, 2025, Brattleboro VT: 118 Elliot and Sparkles, the Giant Evil […]
118 Elliot and Sparkles PresentTurbulence Orchestra & Sub-Units Perform ‘Crescendo of the Tempest’12 April 2025 – 7:30 pm March 25, 2025, Brattleboro VT: 118 Elliot and Sparkles, the Giant Evil […]
118 Elliot presents ‘These Colors Kill Fascism’, a group show of local artists featuring Mary Therese Wright, Gayle Robertson, Tina Olsen, Ellen Cone Maddrey, John Loggia, Nick Garder, and Liza […]
Doors open at 6pm, Screening starts at 6:30pm. Running time 73min. The Architecture +Design Film Series continues Wednesday, November 19th with, My Bones are Woven. For the full season lineup, […]
$10 suggested donation (no one turned away)
Group show featuring artwork by Mary Therese Wright, Ellen Cone Maddrey, Tina Olsen, Liza Cassidy, Gayle Robertson, and John Loggia Official Opening December 5th Gallery Walk. 118 Elliot open gallery hours: […]
Two local activists and history teachers will present a lecture and discussion on the forces that shape our current political condition. Nick Biddle earned tenure as a professor of Latin […]
Doors open at 6pm, Screening starts at 6:30pm. Running time 118min. The Architecture +Design Film Series continues Wednesday, December 10th with MODERNISM, INC.: THE ELIOT NOYES DESIGN STORY. For the […]
Mary Therese Wright, Gayle Robertson, Tina Olsen, Ellen Cone Maddrey, John Loggia, Liza Cassidy 118 Elliot open gallery hours: Thursdays 3 to 6 pm, and during 118 Elliot events Open […]
The Pavilion on the Water
January 21, 2026 | Doors 6pm, Screening 6:30pm
Live at Contois Auditorium, Burlington & 118 Elliot, Brattleboro
Screen from Home, Same Day Only
Directed by Stefano Croci & Silvia Siberini
2023, Italy, 78 Minutes
PREVIEW
The Pavilion on Water invites viewers on an aesthetic and poetic journey into the imagination of Venetian architect Carlo Scarpa, highlighting his deep passion for Japanese culture. Inspired by impressions from Japanese philosopher Ryosuke Hashi, the narrative unfolds along the thread of a central question: What is beauty? This reflection bridges Scarpa's works with traditional Japanese aesthetics, offering opportunities to recall the poetic and emblematic episodes that defined his life. Throughout, the narrative is infused with a sense of nostalgia for the rare phenomenon of an artist’s birth. Even after Scarpa’s passing, his works continue to inspire wonder—a lasting gift to the world.