Duke Entertainment Media and Arts Network Weekend returns for fourth year
By Katya Prosvirkina | September 4, 2012Duke alumni who work professionally in arts, media and entertainment will come back to Duke.
Duke alumni who work professionally in arts, media and entertainment will come back to Duke.
The new exhibit on display at the Nasher Museum of Art is impressive for many reasons.
It’s unlikely that Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright August Wilson would have chosen The Spice Girls as pre-show music for Radio Golf.
A staple of the Durham dining scene shut its doors for the last time this summer.
With each incoming freshman class, Duke students are cultivating and participating in a burgeoning arts community.
Little Green Pig presents 'What Every Girl Should Know'
The Duke Dance Program will present Choreolab this Saturday...
CDS will hold an opening reception next Sunday...
Starting next Tuesday, Duke’s mascot will take a break from its traditional athletic duties in Wallace Wade and Cameron Indoor and shimmy into a more artistic space.
Before the lights go down, it’s evident that Ragtime is not a typical Duke musical.
Asian American students are reclaiming Perkins Library as a space for displaying diversity and subverting stereotypes.
An avid dancer and choreographer, senior Monica Hogan has choreographed numerous pieces...
The 15 works presented in the Kenan Institute for Ethics’ student-run exhibition What is Good Art? set out to confront the ethical questions that arise from the works...
If you’ve ever had brunch at the Washington Duke Inn, you’ve probably heard Paul Holmes playing the piano.
Saba Barnard’s Technicolor Muslimah is a series of 12 portraits portraying Muslim women as she sees them.
In 2006, Canadian playwright David Yee typed a furious e-mail to leaders of Parliament regarding its refusal to acknowledge past discriminatory issues facing Chinese-Canadian communities.
Writer and educator Phillip Lopate is the author of the award-winning personal essay collection Portrait of ...
A quick audience scan revealed a large polarization between the 50-plus and college-aged crowds.
If you’ve been wondering what Duke’s MFA students have been up to all year, now is your chance to find out.
Alexander Calder’s is an art that speaks back, if you’re lucky enough to see it in person.