Folk duo performs at Carrboro ArtsCenter
By Elizabeth Tew | November 17Charlie King and Karen Brandow believe that the folk music they write about ordinary people has a message that can affect its listeners.
Charlie King and Karen Brandow believe that the folk music they write about ordinary people has a message that can affect its listeners.
The latest installation in UNC-CH’s Sloane Art Library features “Collective Memory,” a compendium book of artworks by UNC-Greensboro art professor Sheryl Oring. Oring will give a lecture at the library on Wednesday.
Art can be made even from simple, everyday objects — even a soup can.
Taylor Mathis, author of “The Southern Tailgating Cookbook: A Game-Day Guide for Lovers of Food, Football, and the South,” has a passion for food and college towns.
The Carrboro ArtsCenter’s latest workshops feature the cigar-box guitar — two instruments that are an important precursor to the modern guitar — and will be taught by Justin Johnson.
It’s a constantly moving journey of experience. That’s how Rremida Shkoza described her show “Tribe in Motion,” which is a combination of theater, spirituality and dance set to open at the ArtsCenter Friday. The show, which is told through the narratives of several characters, deals with the connections between human experiences.
Spring is officially here, and the Orange County Historical Museum wants to capture it for future generations.
Lauren Salazar, a Master of Fine Arts student, will be displaying her work as part of the MFA series “Your Turn to Burn.” Her exhibit, “Intertwined,” is composed of weaved twine and string to look abstract and geometric.
More than 50 years ago, one man traveled through six states on a journey to publicize the then little-known genre of folk music.
As part of the art department’s Master of Fine Arts Exhibition Series’ “Your Turn to Burn” program, William Thomas’ paintings are on display this week in Hanes Art Center’s John and June Allcott Gallery.