Arts on the Hill: A Candlelight Night with the Virginia Women's Chorus
Comedy Holy Trinity” Delivers a Divinely Hilarious Start to the Semester
The Incident, Amuse Bouche and The Whethermen — a triumvirate of prominent comedy groups on Grounds — joined forces Friday night for their debut performances of the semester.
Milpa Exhibit Brings Aboriginal Australian Artwork to Life
Beginning this past December and continuing until June 1, the Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection is hosting Milpa — a stop-motion animation exhibit named after the Anangu people’s traditional practice of sand drawing, an artistic and storytelling medium in Australian Indigenous art.
The Mighty Breaks Down Barriers in Discovering Dance
Founded in 2012, The Mighty is a student-run and mainly student-taught dance organization that provides beginner-friendly dance workshops for students interested in experimenting with the art form.
Arts This Week: A Continuous Storyline – Ruffin Gallery
Ben Larsen: The University of Virginia art department is hosting an opening reception at the Ruffin Gallery as part of an exhibition honoring one of its professors. For Arts This Week, we spoke with Megan Marlatt.
Australian Artist To Head UVA’s Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection
An artist, educator and writer specializing in Australian indigenous art will be the next director of the University of Virginia’s Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection, a search committee announced Thursday.
Do You Prefer AI Poems or Poets?
A study in the journal Scientific Reports suggests readers like AI-generated poems more than those written by poets like Sylvia Plath and T.S. Eliot.
Arts This Week: Children’s Printmaking at Kluge-Ruhe
The Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection is hosting a Children’s Printmaking Workshop on Saturday, January 18th from 11am to 1pm. For Arts This Week, we spoke to the workshop’s instructor, Josef Beery.
Holly Wright Ruminates on the Human Body in The Fralin’s Exhibition
With three series of black-and-white photographs depicting various aspects of the human form, “Holly Wright: Vanity” brings themes of corporeality, communication, and mortality into focus.