16
Dec/11

MORE BETWEEN HEAVEN AND EARTH

16
Dec/11

THOMAS JEFFERSON, MARIA COSWAY, AND THE MUSIC AND PHILOSOPHY OF THE ENLIGHTENMENT
Abigail Adams Smith Auditorium
417 East 61st St. between First & York Sts.
Saturday, December 17, $50-$100, 8:00
www.mbhe.charityhappenings.org

It’s right there in the Bill of Rights at the very beginning. Adopted on December 15, 1791, the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution says, “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.” The separation of church and state has been a central issue in America for hundreds of years, and with good reason as fundamentalists from many religions continue to seek to take hold of the political discourse. Since 1947, the nonprofit Americans United for Separation of Church and State has sought to “preserve the constitutional principle of church-state separation as the only way to ensure religious freedom for all Americans.” On Saturday, December 17, the organization, headed by executive director Barry W. Lynn, will host a benefit at the Abigail Adams Smith Auditorium in Manhattan, raising funds and strongly defending the very basic need for the separation of church and state. Award-winning actors Melissa Errico, Matthew Modine, and Kathleen Chalfant will read from the letters of Thomas Jefferson and composer-artist Maria Cosway, who had a lifelong correspondence after meeting when Jefferson was the U.S. envoy in Paris. “Those, which depend on ourselves, are the only pleasures a wise man will count on, for nothing is ours which another may deprive us of,” Jefferson wrote to Cosway in his famous “Dialogue of the Head vs. the Heart” in 1786. “Hence the inestimable value of intellectual pleasures. Even in our power, always leading us to something new, never cloying, we ride serene & sublime above the concerns of this mortal world, contemplating truth & nature, matter & motion, the laws which bind up their existence, & that eternal being who made & bound them up by those laws. Let this be our employ.” The two also discussed art and music, some of which will be performed by members of the Clarion Society Orchestra and guest soloists Jessica Gould (soprano) and Karim Sulayman (tenor), including works by Sacchini, Hewitt, Corelli, Duphly, and Cosway. Directed by Erica Gould, the evening will take place in the elegant auditorium at the Mount Vernon Hotel Museum and Garden, a historic location built in 1799, during the time that Jefferson and Cosway were well in the midst of their very passionate epistolary relationship.