Duke Arts Festival brings sustainable focus to campus
By Katie Fernelius | October 24, 2013From Friday, Oct. 25, through Sunday, Nov. 3, the 5th Annual Duke Arts Festival will carry out Duke’s pledge by integrating sustainability into its theme.
From Friday, Oct. 25, through Sunday, Nov. 3, the 5th Annual Duke Arts Festival will carry out Duke’s pledge by integrating sustainability into its theme.
The Carrboro festival celebrates the casual poet as well as the lover of poetry.
“I’m interested in painting feeling. I want people to look at my paintings and feel how I felt in that moment.”
Gaspard Louis presents a message in his choreography that is as social as it is artistic.
Sit down in the audience of the provocatively-titled "Cock" and you suddenly find yourself in the midst of battle.
Christiana Barnett-Murphy started dancing the second her legs could work.
"This whole space is an experiment, and it’s meant to be."
We always want to do more, and we always want to do better.
“Art uses me for whatever it wants.”
The difference between physical boundaries and mental boundaries is not well-defined.
This show is important for people of all backgrounds, but especially for those who, for the most part, cannot relate to what is being discussed.
On the street there was a bright, cheery, upbeat mood that Harvey Stein believed would be worth sharing.
The environment of the festival epitomizes the theme of developing community around the arts and activism.
“The entire Paradise Garden Project should invoke a sense of the sacredness of nature and by being inside the gallery, one will be a part of it.”
SiteWork aims to promote contemporary art in ways that transcend the traditional museum or gallery apparatus.
Storefront churches have always been a part of Kristin Bedford’s landscape.
"As a university art museum, we have an obligation to bring art exhibitions that engage people in social and political issues around the world."
The full picture comes from living among the people, wandering through the crowds, roaming the streets—the streets of a city like Cairo.
McDermott claims that he had no idea what he was doing, but it doesn’t take long to realize that he did something right.
"This story is about realizing how many things in life we don't pay attention to until the end."