'Enriching experience': Triangle gears up for a summer of outdoor concerts
By Mila Mascenik | April 30A variety of local and national acts are taking the stage across the Triangle for concerts in places from front porches to parks.
A variety of local and national acts are taking the stage across the Triangle for concerts in places from front porches to parks.
On Saturday, the Attic 506 Rooftop Market brought together art and music through the collaboration of local vendors and musicians.
Students in Bharat Sangeet at UNC play Carnatic, Hindustani and fusion music and celebrate South Asian classical music.
Silent Book Clubs hosted in North Carolina are spaces for readers to gather and read for an hour, followed by opportunities for community building.
Anna Hicken, an art therapist whose work centers around grief and loss, has seen her client's emotions represented in a variety of ways. Art therapy, as well as music therapy, can provide an outlet for people who have trouble expressing emotions verbally and helps them slow down and connect with their sense of self.
Spoken word artist Ayanna Albertson-Gay has been listening to gospel music since she was born, particularly at her great-grandmother's church in eastern North Carolina, which, to her, was an embodiment of the genre.
During the month of February, the Carrboro Century Center is hosting artists for their third annual Black History Month Sunday Concert Series as part of the town's Black History Month 2024 theme, "African Americans and the Arts."
On Friday, students of Studio Art 409: Art and Science: Merging Printmaking and Biology, displayed their science-based art in the Genome Sciences Building.
This year, familiar student-run publications like Cellar Door and the Health Humanities Journal of UNC-Chapel Hill gave voice to writers and artists of various disciplines on campus, and new zine "ORLANDO" elevated the voices of queer poets.
Zheng, a former UNC visiting printmaking professor, has five installations in the Hanes Art Center from Oct. 24 to Nov. 30. The exhibition, entitled "One Religion," includes works with philosophical, religious and historical themes.