Arts & Humanities

  • Grace Burns
    No one knows better than Grace Burns just what a difference a vision and a financial boost can mean to a young musician. Burns was one of 14 students to perform at Carnegie Hall鈥檚 Weill Recital Hall in November. In support of opportunities like this, and in celebration of its 100th birthday, the college is embarking on its first major fundraising campaign called music+.
  • CU 51传媒 Associate Director of Choirs Andrea Ramsey conducts song during rehearsal
    Andrea Ramsey, associate director of choral studies聽at CU 51传媒,聽seeks to raise awareness through music for the ongoing tragedy in Flint, Michigan, and tell the stories that may have been lost in the two years since the crisis began.
  • Students and professors participate in a table reading of a modernized version of Henry VI.
    The 鈥淧lay On!" project has commissioned playwrights, including women and writers of color, to translate a variety of Shakespeare plays into contemporary modern English. A group of CU 51传媒 students and professors recently got to participate in a reading of two of those plays.
  • A stock image of old books with a pair of eyeglasses sitting on top of an open page.
    With the new Consortium of Doctoral Studies in Literatures and Cultures, CU 51传媒 is improving support for doctoral students in its six literature Ph.D programs: French and Italian; Spanish and Portuguese; German; classics; English; and Japanese and Chinese.
  • Koji Dennis (left) and Niko Dennis are engrossed in a PhET simulation for iPad. Photo by Kathy Perkins.
    Thanks to a team of undergraduate students, CU 51传媒 now has an innovative new iPad app for kids, extending the international educational footprint of the PhET Interactive Simulations project and its award-winning collection of science and math simulations.
  • Timothy Eatman of Imagining America speaks at CU 51传媒 in June about publicly engaged scholarship.
    CU 51传媒 recently expanded its support of public scholarship in the arts and humanities by joining a national group called Imagining America, which works to advance democracy and participation in higher education.
  • Greg Moore.
    Greg Moore, former Denver Post editor-in-chief, will give free public lectures on campus, including 鈥淧utting the Watchdog to Sleep鈥 at 11 a.m. on Oct. 14 in the Old Main Chapel. As the newly named Hearst Visiting Professor for the fall semester at the College of Media, Communication and Information, the seasoned journalist and editor also will teach a seminar to CMCI students and partner with faculty to teach sessions in two courses.
  • Cynthia Settje, owner and creative mind of Redthreaded
    <p>Think corsets went out with hoop skirts? Corsets have been used in period plays and movies for decades, but they鈥檝e become popular again with women wanting the look of a nipped-in waist, and with historical costume enthusiasts and cosplayers.</p>
    <p>Cynthia Settje, owner and creative mind of Redthreaded, specializes in high quality corsets and costumes with a historical focus, including theatrical costuming, costume recreation, luxury corsetry and reproduction clothing.</p>
  •  Students at shakespeare camp
    <p>Ah, Shakespeare. Whether one loves, despises or fears the work of the immortal bard of Stratford-upon-Avon often depends upon the manner of first exposure. For a crash course in just how accessible, appealing and fun Shakespeare can be, there are few better places than the Colorado Shakespeare Festival鈥檚 smashingly successful summer programs for children, Camp Shakespeare for 10- to 18-year-olds and Shakespeare鈥檚 Sprites, for ages 6-9.</p>
  • Hung Liu (Chinese b. 1948), The Martyr, 2001, lithograph and collage
    The CU Art Museum (CUAM) at the University of Colorado 51传媒 has kicked off an initiative to raise $2 million to purchase and manage the Sharkive, a distinguished collection comprising 40 years of printmaking collaborations between renowned artists and Shark鈥檚 Ink of Lyons, Colorado.
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