Singing Hoosiers to present Chimes of Christmas show at IU Auditorium
The Singing Hoosiers will be performing its annual holiday show, Chimes of Christmas at 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Dec. 7 at the IU Auditorium.
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The Singing Hoosiers will be performing its annual holiday show, Chimes of Christmas at 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Dec. 7 at the IU Auditorium.
A quaint teahouse was transformed into a forum for poets to express themselves. BloomingTea organized a poetry night at 7 p.m. Tuesday.
The Bloomington Symphony Orchestra is performing its annual holiday concert at 5:30 p.m. and 8 p.m. Friday Nov. 29 at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater and at 6 p.m. Sunday Dec. 1 at the Brown County Music Center.
The Turkish film “Auf der Anderen Seite,” also known as “The Edge of Heaven,” screened at 7 p.m. Monday in the IU Cinema. The film was the third and final entry into the “Between Worlds: Cultural Hybridity in Turkish Films” series.
A small table surrounded by eight chairs is bustling with action in the middle of the library. Elmer’s glue sticks with tangerine caps and multicolored safety scissors stand next to piles of rectangular pieces of brightly colored cardstock. Students and faculty chat among themselves while cutting paper into ornate shapes and arranging it together.
The Indiana Research Studies symposium, organized by Platform: An Arts and Humanities Research Laboratory, will have a welcome reception and opening panel from 6:30-10 p.m. on Nov. 21 in the Federal Room in the Indiana Memorial Union, and will continue with more events beginning at 9 a.m. at the Dimension Mill on the following Friday and Saturday.
Young Professionals Bloomington and the Greater Bloomington Chamber of Commerce have announced a new arts series called the Bloomington Arts Passport. This series is an eight-ticket subscription geared for those aged 21-40 to explore different arts performances in Bloomington.
The Lilly Library isn't like most other libraries that might come to mind. Students aren’t studying silently at tables spanning the entire room, there are no calculus or psychology textbooks open wide and coffee cups are not standing tall next to every sleep-deprived student.
At work, Marie Bourgeois designs mock medicine bottles, baby food containers, boarding passes, highway signage, catering vans, vinyl records and children’s books.
Bloomington’s local tea shop, BloomingTea, is teaming up with the University Graduate School Emissaries for Diversity and Inclusion to present an open poetry night from 7-9 p.m. Tuesday Nov. 19. The night will feature IU English Professor Ross Gay.
Nearing midnight on April 20, 2006, five Jacobs School of Music students: Georgina Joshi, Chris Carducci, Garth Eppley, Zachary Novak and Robert Samels died in a plane crash while traveling to the Monroe County Airport. Georgina’s father Yatish Joshi and his wife Joan Joshi are now the executive producers of a film revolving around their daughter’s death.
From Dec. 12-29 the Buskirk-Chumley Theater will show Disney’s “Newsies” as its 13th annual family holiday musical. Tickets start at $16.95 for children 12 and under, $18.95 for students, $29.95 for those under 35 and $34.95 for 35 and over.
Two Australians with a Versace leopard leotard and a black Hawaiian shirt walk into a bar.
Grammy-nominated and international group Tambuco Percussion Ensemble is coming to perform at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Auer Hall.
IU’s Office of the Bicentennial is taking IU’s history on the road with its interactive exhibit “All for You,” otherwise known as the “Big Red Bus.”
B-Town Boxing will host an event next week with former world champion boxer Lamon Brewster. The Nov. 19 event will include a meet and greet with Brewster, as well as a seminar during which Brewster will teach the mechanics and fundamentals of boxing.
The Grunwald Gallery of Art is welcoming a new exhibit entitled “Ongoing Matter” to run from Dec. 3-14. There will also be an opening reception for the exhibit from 6-8 p.m. Dec. 6.
Patrons of Richard Wagner’s “Parsifal” lined up Nov. 10 outside of the Musical Arts Center. During their wait, they were met with the homemade signs and pamphlets of the Indiana Graduate Workers Coalition, reading “Behind the scenes.”
Potpourri of the Arts began in complete darkness after an introduction from host Bootsy Collins. In the moments before, cheers grew louder from the audience in anticipation before the curtain had even begun to lift off the stage.
Between rows of vendors and potential customers, eyes shift between colorful paintings to floating plants and reflective jewelry.