The Weekend List: Bike Photos, Dutch Food, SYREN Dance, Precious, Louis & Capathia

THEATER: At BAM "vindication and malicious intents have never been more rapturous than in director Robert Wilson's Quartett. Written by German playwright Heiner Müller (as a highly condensed adaptation of the 18th-century French novel Les Liaisons dangereuses), this work is an extraordinary expression of innocence lost." With Isabelle Huppert.

CIRCUS: At BAM, "the human body unfolds as a surreal rock and roll fantasy in Inside Out, Swedish troupe Cirkus Cirkör's phantasmagoric journey into the outer reaches of inner life."

DANCE: On Saturday, November 14, at 7:30 PM SYREN
presents last of the leaves: "highly physical using the driving and churning idiosyncrasies of John Adam’s
“Shaker Loops” to explore the mysteries surrounding the cycles of human
life. Birth, illness, death, and the different energies needed to
experience them, are points of departure for this piece as eight
dancers journey through qualities both distant and tender." At St. Francis Xavier Auditorium in Park Slope . 736 President Street. ONE NIGHT ONLY. Tickets: $20 (cash only at the door. More information: info@syrendance.org

FILM: Precious: Based on the Novel Push by Saphire is at the Park Slope Pavilion and at  BAM and other theaters.

MUSIC: On Saturday, November 14 at 7 PM, Joe's Pub presents Louis Rosen & Capathis Jenkins. They perform songs from their new album The Ache of Possibility. 425 Lafayette Street in Manhattan.

FREE BIKE PHOTOS: On Sunday, November, 15 11 AM until 3 PM at the Old Stone House, professional photographer Keiko Niwa will photograph cyclists alongside their bikes. Receive a hi-res image for personal use, and be profiled on the New York Bike Jumble website showing off your bike and telling others why you choose to ride.

COLONIAL STYLE DUTCH MEAL: Old First
Dutch Reformed Church
host an authentic 17th-century service with period
costumes and music followed by a Dutch meal. It all begins at 11 AM at Old First. 729 Carroll St. at Seventh Avenue in Park Slope, (718) 638-8300.