UNC to hire three faculty members focused on Asian American studies after student petition
In spring 2024, the UNC College of Arts and Sciences will begin the process of hiring three faculty members focused on the area of Asian American studies.
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In spring 2024, the UNC College of Arts and Sciences will begin the process of hiring three faculty members focused on the area of Asian American studies.
The Chelsea Theater stands as the home of arthouse cinema in Chapel Hill. The old-fashioned picture-house is a bastion of classic Hollywood and foreign films — but the theater is by no means stuck in the past.
In April, cartoonist Max Huffman's monthly rent increased from $800 to $1,400 when the Carrboro apartment building he had lived in for three years changed ownership.
Yumi Kendall, now in her 20th season as a cellist with The Philadelphia Orchestra, said she grew up surrounded by music because of her trailblazing grandfather, who brought the Suzuki method of music education from Japan to the U.S. in the 1960s.
Fabrizio Bianchi, one of the creators of The ArtsCenter exhibit “De Colores,” imagines group art exhibits as collaborative musical performances.
French language graduate teaching fellow Alex Goldych still remembers the first time she watched a French film in high school.
The Ackland Film Forum is bringing a diverse and intriguing selection of nineties throwback films to the big screen this fall, with free admission to the public and campus life experience credit for UNC students.
For a brief, enchanted moment on Sunday, visitors to the Ackland Art Museum were transported into the visual and auditory world of a French noble of the late 18th century.
Attendees crowded under vendor tents, admiring creations by local artists as a DJ played live music at the Carrboro Town Commons for The Bazaar Craft and Art Market on Sunday.
Rain forced the UNC Jazz Faculty Concert indoors, but there was still a packed house in Moeser Auditorium on Sept. 12. The energy in the audience and among the performers was palpable, with people of all ages erupting into applause after every song.
In bold, neon pink letters against the dim, blue stage lights, a sign reads “Clyde’s” — a reference to both the titular diner on stage and the title of the PlayMakers Repertory Company’s current show.
As long as the ladder was not too hot to touch, she was painting.
A drum set starts a beat. Another layers on top of it. Then another. Suddenly there are five drum sets all playing in sync. They stop, and giggles and laughter from the musicians begin.
The music was on, and the room was filled with enthusiastic chatter.
My Sister Maura, an Raleigh based band and self-described “indie shoegaze outfit,” has played at Neptunes Parlour before, but never in front of an at-capacity crowd.
The Carrboro and Chapel Hill art communities come alive on the second Friday of every month through November for their 2nd Friday Art Walk.
Anjali Keyal said that when she is performing, all that matters is her, her body, the audience and the lights. That’s all there is.
There are benefits to finding creative ways — such as writing, art, drawing or photography — to deal with the pain and fear caused by the events of Aug. 28, Garry Crites, the senior director of strategic programs at the ArtsCenter in Carrboro, said.
Throughout the Triangle, Latino creators are expressing their identities and experiences through art, from music to dance to murals.
Artists near and far have traveled to downtown Raleigh for the 13th annual Hopscotch Music Festival, which advertises itself as an even larger and better experience than previous years.