‘Hoos Producing’ Spotlights Music Production on-Grounds
The new club closes a gap in the University music scene, creating a space to appreciate the previously neglected art of music production.
The new club closes a gap in the University music scene, creating a space to appreciate the previously neglected art of music production.
After he got his first taste of film production, Barbour said he became more involved in the local film and arts scene.
According to Stepanic, scholarship on vampires is valuable because analysis of vampire folklore provides insight into humanity.
Founded in 2017, Ballet & Books is a national non-profit organization that pairs mentors with young girls, using social interaction and movement-based activities to enact and embody the material they read.
At the beginning of each academic year, the University community has the opportunity to participate in an emergent part of the on-Grounds arts scene — the U.Va. Arts Welcome Picnic.
Currently illuminating the dark corners of the Fralin Museum of Art is “Barbara Hammer: Evidentiary Bodies,” a vivid exhibition exploring what it means to make art in the midst of severe illness.
Here, bluegrass, country and blues fans come together to jam, perform and participate in events throughout the semester geared toward a traditional style of music with which University students might not be familiar.
Student bands Boscobel and Looseleaf showed off their unique styles opening for The Barons, a locally beloved traveling rock band. Locals and University students alike filled the crowd, loving all three distinct bands throughout the three hour long show.
WXTJ, the University’s student-run radio station, collaborated with student publication V Magazine to host four student bands at a 2000’s-themed show to welcome students back to Charlottesville and kick off the year in retro style.