Foster Student Government invites students to block party with food, music
If a break from studying from exams is necessary this weekend, the Foster/McNutt Spring Block Party can be a scapegoat.
If a break from studying from exams is necessary this weekend, the Foster/McNutt Spring Block Party can be a scapegoat.
A urinal with Marcel Duchamp's signature painted on the side started it all. He wanted to challenge the assumption that art required an artist, so in 1917, Duchamp submitted the otherwise untouched bathroom fixture for exhibition and revolutionized art.
Throughout his career, the English poet W.H. Auden held the belief that "some books are undeservedly forgotten; none are undeservedly remembered."
Fan fiction, I condemn thee to hell! That was the fire and brimstone message of last week's column. But surely there must be some soothing balm of sweet salvation for aspiring writers desperate to waste the sum of their waking hours on the Internet.
Lovers of unique and controversial cinema will be happily surprised if they wander into The Cinemat any Thursday night in April, as they will find the first-ever German and Turkish series in Bloomington.
There are few places where student art can hang next to the work of famous artists. The School of Fine Arts Gallery is one of them. "SoFA has high standards," said Galo Moncayo, an IU professor of sculpture. "Every time students go, they get to see their peers' art alongside internationally known artists."
Academic-based dances sandwiched student collaborations at the African American Dance Company spring concert, "Moving the Movement: Dancing Liberation," Saturday evening at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater. Interim Director Deadra Nelson-Mason said she based the first and last pieces of the performance on research conducted for her thesis in African diaspora studies and dance at New York University.
Rows of black tights shook with laughter under the glare of lights, and the chorus of Paula Abdul's "Cold Hearted" played again and again, but Gary Wohlafka, listed in InMotion Dance Company's "Fusion" program as the lighting designer and audio technician, just couldn't seem to get it right. Several times, co-director and junior Justine Menter's blonde hair would flip up while she yelled, "Music? Music now, please," up to the sound booth.
InMotion Dance Company co-director and junior Justine Menter said style, dance experience and creativity from all over the country will fuse this Saturday evening for a great performance.
Prepare to reset your clocks. At 2 a.m. Sunday, Indiana will conform with the majority of the country and begin observing daylight-saving time for the first time since 1970. All political arguments aside, let's get down to the heart of this concept from a cultural level.
UTICA, N.Y. -- It may seem like an ordinary art lecture for the visitors viewing a watercolor titled "Moon and Cumulus Cloud." But the listeners are sitting on exercise mats and wearing sweats. It's a yoga art session, an effort to soothe the soul and tone the body in the inspirational setting of an art museum. After the art lesson on how the painter captured the effect of nocturnal light on the landscape, the visitors will get an hourlong yoga session.
In a small rehearsal room in the Musical Arts Center Tuesday night, a group of seven strangely-clad people met to practice their arias and dance steps for their upcoming performance. They wore a mixture of street clothes, dance shoes and bits of fancy petticoats and headdresses. The elaborate costumes, lilting melodies and fluid motions are all parts of baroque period culture. This Sunday, thanks to a grant from IU's New Frontiers in the Arts and Humanities program, the Early Music Institute will be sponsoring a performance featuring the IU Baroque Orchestra and the New York Baroque Dance Company. The production will be at 8 p.m. at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater and admission is free. The first half of the program will showcase the New York Baroque Dance Company with two dance numbers, and the second half will feature several IU students in the baroque opera "Pygmalion." The IU Baroque Orchestra will provide the music for the entire show, said Catherine Turocy, co-founder and artistic director of the NYBDC.
INDIANAPOLIS -- Growing up near Indiana University, John Mellencamp couldn't help but become a big college basketball fan. So big, in fact, that as part of the NCAA's Final Four weekend here he's headlining a free outdoor concert Sunday -- one expected to draw up to 100,000 people. Mellencamp, whose "R.O.C.K. in the U.S.A." is featured in commercials promoting this year's NCAA tournament, agreed to perform largely because of his relationship with former IU president Myles Brand, who now heads the NCAA.
The lights dim and a sea of colored luminescent lights flood the busied café. The musicians take stage -- rhythm in the back and horns, trumpet and saxophone up front. The ensemble rustles its music then turns to the sax player who begins to snap his fingers. The room is silent save the uniform tapping of the feet to the recognized beat. The foot is understood. After the count off, the horns blare and the players begin to craft their musical art. For the players in The Mike Epstein Quintet, a local IU student jazz combo, this musical ritual embodies their typical Friday night.
TREASURE! -- Dora the Explorer (right, kneeling) and her friends investigate the treasure chest that holds all of their party supplies. But just around the corner are the Pirate Piggies with a plan to steal the treasure chest. Dora's Pirate Adventure is showing at the IU Auditorium through tonight.