“Without its special language, would art need to submit to the scrutiny of broader audiences and local ones? Would it hold up?” So asks online art publication Triple Canopy’s widely circulated essay ...
If you don’t know the name Naja Elon Webb now, commit it to your memory. A recent graduate of Duke Ellington School of the Arts, Webb has boosted her resume in a major way the summer between high ...
There is a thin line between one person's jest and another person's discrimination. ASU's Tunnel of Oppression Art Gallery is a new effort, in connection with the 11th annual Tunnel of Oppression ...
“When Cuban writer Néstor Díaz de Villegas was our age, he was thrown in prison for a poem,” wrote students in the Spanish nonfiction writing class Hispanic Studies 2306. “Now he speaks to our class ...
MADISON, Wisconsin — Throughout history, women have been swaddled in satins, velvets, and crinkly chiffons with adornments so excessive that they curtail movement. Elaborate hairstyles and high heels ...
Art exhibit to display student works exploring topics from anxiety to oppression Angel King, a fourth-year art student, created an inverted bedroom for the Undergraduate Scholarship Award Exhibition.
The role of art as a "symbol of healing" for survivors of oppression and violence is the focus of the latest exhibit at the New Art Corridor in the first-floor lobby of Trio, at 245 Walnut St. in ...
Local filmmaker Jane Gillooly, a native of Ferguson, Mo., returned to her hometown in the wake of the 2014 police shooting death of Michael Brown. There she filmed the documentary “Where the Pavement ...
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