Eighth Arts Everywhere Day serves as catalyst for yearlong creativity
Last Friday, students, creativity and bubbles filled the Pit for an Interactive Art Fair, organized as part of the eighth annual Arts Everywhere Day.
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Last Friday, students, creativity and bubbles filled the Pit for an Interactive Art Fair, organized as part of the eighth annual Arts Everywhere Day.
On Saturday afternoon, the graffiti-covered walls of the rooftop between music venue Local 506 and bar Beer Study hosted tents of art vendors and customers for the Attic 506 Rooftop Market.
On Friday morning, I got up and took a walk while listening to “Older,” Lizzy McAlpine’s newly-released third album. And as I made my way down Franklin Street, the music was the perfect soundtrack for a sunny April morning.
And the winner is… Sabrosura!
UNC senior Ryan Christiano spent many hours of her childhood drawing with pencil and paper. But last year she realized the art was no longer bringing her the joy she'd always associated with it.
Exhibits all around town made from linocut prints, ceramic sculptures and a variety of other mediums explore themes of disenchantment, sports culture and modern interpretations of history.
On March 15, 140 W. Franklin St. Plaza welcomed a new resident — a 7-foot tall raccoon named Rubbish.
For the past few years, self-taught artist Tyamica Mabry has been honing her artistic style, which includes painting flowers and bold faces, from her house. For the next year, she will be moving her work to a private, free studio in Eno Arts Mill as the second annual BIPOC Artist-in-Residence.
Winston-Salem blues musician Ron Hunter, better known as "Big Ron Hunter," learned to play guitar on his family farm as a child with his father.
Between three humanities departments, the tragic story of a woman who gave her life for her husband is taking center stage — ancient Greek dramatist Euripides’ story of Alcestis.
UNC junior Quincy Griffin made his first beat at just 10 years old. As the son of a rapper and producer, Griffin gained a musical foundation throughout his teens — but it wasn’t until he got to college that he began to take music more seriously.
In the mid-'90s, MTV came to Chapel Hill.
On Tuesday and Wednesday, Carolina Performing Arts will host the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater in Memorial Hall. These performances are part of the dance company's milestone anniversary season celebrating 65 years of bringing African American heritage and culture to stages across the world, from Chapel Hill to Paris.
While the Carrboro Town Council shares a duty to serve their community, they do not necessarily share the same taste in music. A collaborative playlist from the group of elected officials could include anything from slow R&B to black metal, with hints of local musicians like Elizabeth Cotten or drummer Laura King.
On Thursday, opening night, in the intimate space of the Elizabeth Price Kenan Theatre, the cast and crew of “The Seagull” showed the audience how they made a classic their own.
When Joseph Richards first performed stand-up for a final as an undergraduate student at Georgia College and State University, they said their jokes were awful, but it sparked their love for comedy.
Award-winning novelist and former N.C. poet laureate Fred Chappell’s best-known novel ends with the question: “Are you one of us or not?”
When the Ackland Art Museum held a ceremony in January to give a painting to the heirs of a Jewish lawyer, Armand Isaac Dorville, whose collection had been seized and auctioned off in Nazi-occupied France, it was a meaningful event for everyone involved.
Alexander Payne’s “The Holdovers” is the epitome of a feel-good Christmas movie.
For UNC a cappella group The Tarpeggios, winning first place is secondary to the creative process.