GLOWfest canceled, deadmau5 still plays
The GLOWfest Twitter page announced that the show headlining deadmau5 had been cancelled due to “inclement weather," but another show was in the works.
The GLOWfest Twitter page announced that the show headlining deadmau5 had been cancelled due to “inclement weather," but another show was in the works.
Master of Fine Arts candidate Amanda Lee said she could care less about making perfect art. She cares much more about the dialogue her work creates. Lee has been selected to showcase her newest art in the Fuller Projects venue, and her exhibit will feature printmaking and photography known as “A Solution of Silver of White Light.”Lee’s exhibit will be from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Friday at the Fuller Projects. The event, like all that are at the McCalla School, is free and open to the public.
This weekend, Anti-Swag will have a release party for its album “We’re Your Age.” The show begins at 7:30 p.m. Friday at Rhino’s All Ages Music Club. All proceeds from the entrance fee, which is $5, will go to the Humane Society, according to the event poster.
“In the Next Room, or the vibrator play,” is set in 1875 during the expansion of electricity to homes and residences, the play revolves around the use of a vibrator as treatment for “female hysteria.”
IU’s third GLOWfest, headlining deadmau5, was scheduled to begin at 4:30 p.m., but weather issues proved unfavorable for the outdoor venue.
Hurricane Irene wiped out an estimated one-third of the country’s pumpkin crop, flooding fields, breaking branches and taking some of the fill out of our pumpkin pie. With Halloween quickly approaching, the mass rotting of Charlie Brown’s fabled “Great Pumpkin” is sure to spook jack-o’-lantern creators across the country.
In 1970, David Coleman started his law firm in a Victorian-style building on Grant Street just south of Kirkwood Avenue. He worked there for almost 40 years. In 2008, he wanted to start a business with his son Gabe.
Author and IU alumna Leena Ceraveeni sounds like a typical American with Midwestern roots. She grew up in Greenwood, Ind., attended IU as a journalism major and then moved to Texas. Her life was filled with culture clashes of Indian heritage and American upbringing. These personal racial experiences led her to write her first novel, “The Hometown.” The book is a coming-of-age novel that centers on 23-year-old Mala Thomas, an Indian American who copes with her racial identity.
"Abraham Lincoln’s Big Gay Dance Party" will premiere 8 p.m. Friday in the Ivy Tech John Waldron Auditorium.
On Wednesday, Deadmau5 and three guests will perform at the farm as GLOWfest’s fourth Bloomington show.
Along with local bands Circuit Des Yeux and Sitar Outreach Ministry, Glenn Jones will perform at 8 p.m. Wednesday at Russian Recording. Tickets are $6.
There are some things that everyone should consider in their search for a costume: comfort and individuality.
Performer, composer and educator Michael Spiro said he is proud to be part of a faculty he said were first musicians before teachers. After spending years as a visiting professor at the Jacobs School of Music, Spiro has joined the faculty full-time. The seven-time Grammy-nominated jazz percussionist is now an associate professor of percussion. He assists both the percussion and jazz departments to develop the curricula for Cuban and Brazilian music.
The main theme of the IU Art Museum’s newest gallery is that a work of art might have the power to spark a change in one’s political, social or cultural ideology, especially in times of war and revolution.
People at the IU Cinema for the international Home Movie Day celebration Sunday became engaged and immersed in the history of old film reels dug out from closets. This is the ninth year Home Movie Day has been celebrated nationwide, and this year marks the fourth at IU.
Home Movie Day, which is every Oct. 15, is a national event in its ninth year. This is its fourth year at IU.
The 2011 Campus Consciousness Tour brings the funky musician to the IU Auditorium this weekend.
Long before the days of changing your relationship status on Facebook and tweeting about the romantic things done for you, there were more permanent and public ways to express your feelings for someone. Carving initials into freshly laid concrete and defacing a tree in the heart of campus were just two of the more popular ways to symbolize your love would last forever.
Ethan Uslan will perform a live accompaniment to the 1927 film “Sunrise” on Saturday at the IU Cinema. He said he hopes the screening and his individual musical style will serve as insight into movie-going in the ’20s.
Ziggy Marley, leader of the band Ziggy Marley and the Melody Makers, will perform at 8 p.m. Oct. 16 at the Bluebird Nightclub.