Violette Verdy honored in fall ballet opener
The life and work of professor Violette Verdy will be celebrated this weekend as IU Opera and Ballet Theater presents its fall ballet, Classical Europe — Celebrating Violette.
The life and work of professor Violette Verdy will be celebrated this weekend as IU Opera and Ballet Theater presents its fall ballet, Classical Europe — Celebrating Violette.
Tesoros Latinos, created to showcase the variety of Hispanic art on display, shows off IU's rich Hispanic culture.
A traveling Smithsonian exhibit featuring vibrant, complex stories of Asian-American history and culture will be on display from 4 to 6 p.m. Thursday at the Asian Culture Center, 807 E. 10th St.
Aiming to further explore the arts through collaboration and innovation in performance, the contemporary dance program will merge with the IU Department of Theatre and Drama, according to a press release.
IU alumnus and concert pianist Jeremy Denk has been named a 2013 MacArthur Fellow.
Jocelyn Neal, a professor of music and adjunct professor of American studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, presented “Who Owns That Song? Copyright Law and the Emergence of the Popular Music Recording Industry" at the Jacobs School of Music.
Assistant Professor Anke Birkenmaier talked about the work of artist Emilio Sanchez during her interactive lecture “Emilio Sanchez’s Visions of Light: Caribbean Architecture Reimagined” Wednesday for the IU Art Museum’s first Noon Talk of the semester.
Eddie Pepitone will perform this weekend at the Comedy Attic. There will also be a screening of his autobiographical documentary titled “The Bitter Buddha.”
Book columnist Jenna Fagan talks about three inexpensive bookstores close to campus.
The “Imaginary Invalid” opened Indiana University Theater’s fall line up with a modern twist on an old plot Wednesday night. Though the play was originally written by Moliere, or Jean Poquelin in 1673, it was adapted and translated by James Magruder in 1999 and modernized by director Gavin Cameron-Webb.
The working women of World War II are celebrated in a new exhibition called “Photographing Rosie the Riveter” at the IU Art Museum, which opens Tuesday.
Wonderlab’s latest mini-exhibition, “Nature’s Vampires,” explores the habits of bed bugs with live, magnified views and interactive, touch-screen games, allowing visitors to learn where the creatures would most likely be tucked away.
The IDS got a chance to speak with singer/songwriter Laura Stevenson before her performance at 9:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Bishop Bar as part of her tour in support of her album “Wheels.”
Hyderabad has challenged travel columnist Kate Thacker's former preference for city life.
Food columnist Amanda Arnold gives her thoughts on the popular pumpkin-flavored-goods craze that sweeps American every autumn.
Martina Arroyo, an IU Jacobs School of Music distinguished professor emerita of voice, has been selected as a recipient of a 2013 Kennedy Center Honors award, according to an IU press release last Friday.
“Visualizing Disease," an exhibit of illustrations of 16th through mid-19th century diseases, will be on display at the Lilly Library now through Dec. 20.
Downtown streets were lively and bustling with 11 venues filling more than five consecutive nights.
On Saturday, the folk-alternative sister duo Lily and Madeleine Jurkiewicz performed at the 20th anniversary of Bloomington’s Lotus World Music and Arts Festival.
Before Québécois bands Nomadic Massive or De Temps Antan took the stage at Lotus Fest, the Indiana Daily Student had the chance to speak to Pierre-Luc Dupuis of De Temps Antan and Lou Piensa of Nomadic Massive to find out more about their formation, influences and what they have planned for the future.