Signs make walking Chapel Hill easier
Chapel Hill is looking to better market itself to visitors by touting its assets on signs downtown.
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Chapel Hill is looking to better market itself to visitors by touting its assets on signs downtown.
In addition to adding four limestone animal sculptures to the front roundabout, the Chapel Hill Public Library will also have a multimedia public art project installed across from its main circulation desk.
TO THE EDITOR:
Starting tonight at seven, the Ackland Art Museum and Global Cinema Studies department will come together for a very unique event.
During the course of the semester, UNC students and Chapel Hill residents will visit the Ackland Art Museum to see the fall exhibitions: “PhotoVision: Selections from a Decade of Collecting,” and “Adding to the Mix 8: William H. Mumler’s ‘Mrs. W. H. Mumler, Clairvoyant Physician,’” opening today.
Whether it’s smooth saxophone outside the Ackland Museum Store or drums in the nook of Julian’s, local musicians are using Franklin Street as their stage.
Ackland Art Museum
The Contemporary Japanese Ceramics from the Collection of Carol and Jeffrey is on display at the Ackland Art Museum. Photo courtesy of the Ackland Art Museum.
Bagged lunches and art analysis will bring together students and community members today at the Ackland Art Museum.
Unbeknownst to many, one of the southeast’s best Asian art collections lives at the Ackland, right at UNC’s doorstep.
Since being honored on May 5, the Ackland Art Museum may agree with the Beatles: love is all you need.
Working with curators is no novel experience for MFA student Michael Bramwell. But the Ackland Art Museum’s curatorial assistant, Lauren Turner, was open in her vision – and that changed things.
With the arrival of spring, there is no better time for the Ackland Museum Store to debut its “Field Studies” exhibition produced by environmentalist artists Ann Marie Kennedy and Bryant Holsenbeck .
When the opportunity to combine his love of visual and performing arts arose, professor Dana Coen took the chance to recreate an older concept in a fresh way.
Andy Warhol is a household name now, and drawings from when he was just first starting his career in New York are rarely ever seen in the United States.
From country and blues to rock to Broadway, a genre of American music exists for everyone to sing along with.
The Ackland Art Museum is promoting its first ARTINI — a 1930s-themed evening of style, drinks, and entertainment inspired by the museum’s current exhibition of prints from the period — with Feature Nights at local bars.
Ink drawings by Andy Warhol on brown paper bags with grease stains aren’t exactly what comes to mind when you think of art. But there it was, framed and mounted on the red wall.
Looking to learn more about North Carolina and the southern experience? Every week, Tales from the Old North State will feature events in and around the area that highlight the history and culture of N.C.
Leaving the Table, an exhibition of new woodwork by Bill Neville, is on display at the Ackland Museum Store from Feb. 14 until March 30. This Chapel Hill artist's exhibit includes four newly crafted tables, a series of mirrors and many turned vessels in a variety of woods. Leaving the Table also includes a large photo montage chronicling Bill Neville's career.