PBS television program interviews IU professor
Tonight PBS will ask us, "How good is higher education in America today?"
Tonight PBS will ask us, "How good is higher education in America today?"
Arts and crafts as part of a viable arts economy is nothing new to Bloomington.
BERN, Switzerland -- When Paul Klee applied for Swiss nationality after fleeing Nazi Germany, his request was refused because it was feared that if his art should "take root in Switzerland, it would insult real art and cause good taste to deteriorate."
Bloomington welcomes the sex, drugs and palm trees of 1980s Hollywood beginning Friday at the John Waldron Arts Center.
When Jimmy Buffett wrote songs about food, he might have written them someplace similar to Cheeseburger in Paradise.
When checking the mail a few months ago, IU alum, stage designer and Professor Robert O'Hearn got the surprise of his life.
The Rosemary P. Miller Gallery located in Bloomington's John Waldron Arts Center has been home to many fascinating local art exhibits over the years.
SANTA MARIA, Calif. -- A jury acquitted Michael Jackson on Monday of molesting a 13-year-old cancer survivor at his Neverland ranch, vindicating the pop star who insisted he was the victim of mother-and-son con artists and a prosecutor with a vendetta. Jurors also acquitted Jackson of getting the boy drunk and of conspiring to imprison his accuser and the boy's family at the storybook estate -- a total legal victory but one that may do little to improve his bizarre image.
BERLIN - A previously unknown work by Johann Sebastian Bach has been discovered in a crate of 18th-century birthday cards removed from a German library shortly before it was devastated by fire, researchers said Wednesday.
Melinda Williams first turned to art for therapeutic value. Now, she is not only doing what she loves but also making a profit.
LOS ANGELES - He was the cruel taskmaster who made Harrison Ford hang with snakes and rats, required Robert Duvall to shave his head and turned Carrie Fisher and Mark Hamill into Pez dispensers.
Pharaohs may never have found the glorious afterlife they were expecting, but one thing about ancient Egypt is eternal -- the popularity of King Tut.
ANGOLA, Ind. -- Strand Theatre owner Dana Thompson greets patrons at the door.
Much in Bloomington resonates the past: the courthouse, the old university buildings and the portraits in the Union commons.
Imagine a time when there were no films driven by special effects and the concept of an action movie did not exist.
OAKLAND, Calif. -- In a computer-crammed space at Savage Beast Technologies, divergent melodies seep softly from headphones worn by young men and women who listen to music with the intensity of submarine sonar operators.
The art, the plants, the food, the wine, the music... Friday night's Art and Garden Exhibit at the Bloomington Hospitality House had it all.
Strolling around the Prima Gallery's new summer show, it's easy to forget every art piece and its respective price tag has a unique history, similar to the gallery itself.
ATLANTA - Adesuwa Orobor sat alone in the corner of the studio, frustrated at her sketch. On the desk in front of the 16-year-old was her muse, a photo of Picasso's "Queen Isabella."
There is something magical happening in the IU Lilly Library this summer. We all remember them from our childhood.