Partially blind artist displays artwork of flowers
Maggie Love is living proof that age is but a number.
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Maggie Love is living proof that age is but a number.
The Carolina Ukulele Ensemble plans to prove that the humble ukulele is a musical force to be reckoned with.
Singer-songwriter and pianist Vienna Teng recently released her fifth album, Aims, and will be playing at The Carolina Theatre in Durham as part of her U.S. tour.
Jason Sommer is a Fontbonne University professor whose body of work has focused on his identity as the child of a Holocaust survivor. Sommer will be doing a reading today in Greenlaw Hall as a part of the English department’s Armfield poetry series, which honors UNC alumna and poet Blanche Britt Armfield.
Greensboro-based theater company Triad Stage and PlayMakers Repertory Company are coming together for the first time to reimagine Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s last night alive in “The Mountaintop.”
Deep Dish Theater Company and the Chapel Hill Public Library are collaborating to bring together their respective theater and literary worlds.
Local author Fred Bahnson will discuss his new memoir “Soil and Sacrament: A Spiritual Memoir of Food and Faith” at Flyleaf Books on Thursday.
Carolina Performing Arts’ 2013-2014 season launches the new initiative, Arts@TheCore, which aims to bridge the gap between the arts and academics on campus. Emil Kang, executive director for the arts, spoke with staff writer Sarah Ang about the upcoming season.
The “Rite of Spring at 100” continues this week as contemporary dance titan Nederlands Dans Theater 1 returns to Carolina Performing Arts, kicking off its national tour with the U.S. premiere of “Chamber.”
Senora Lynch, member of the Haliwa-Saponi tribe and newly selected 2013 Elder in Residence for the UNC American Indian Center will discuss “The Gift” — her mosaic design on a walkway outside the Student Union — tonight.
For the first time, the University’s graduating Master of Fine Arts students will present their work in solo exhibitions — an eight-week series titled “Your Turn to Burn.”
Curators hope visitors will fall in love with the Ackland Art Museum’s newest exhibit.
This weekend, art will help build homes.
Thick, gray curtains frame a studio classroom, setting a somber mood. But the play that will take place in that room will be comic.
A man jumps, momentarily flying. He lands menacingly in a spotlight.
Three years after its controversial performance of “Orpheus and Eurydice,” Compagnie Marie Chouinard is returning to Memorial Hall.
_David Menconi, The (Raleigh) News & Observer’s music critic since 1991, is making waves with his recent biography — “Ryan Adams: Losering, a Story of Whiskeytown” — about the former frontman of the local alternative rock band Whiskeytown.
Hundreds of students gathered to watch others ride invisible horses as part of a Gangnam Style flash mob Monday afternoon in the Pit.