Campus MovieFest competition kicks off
Campus MovieFest has hit Bloomington, and aspiring filmmakers have a shot at showing their films.
Campus MovieFest has hit Bloomington, and aspiring filmmakers have a shot at showing their films.
Live music and a supportive audience filled the Neal-Marshall Black Culture Center’s Grand Hall on Wednesday. More than 100 people attended the second annual Spanish and Portuguese Song Festival.
Arriving in India meant using all of my senses. The act of absorbing the many different tastes, smells, sights, sounds, spirituality and intensity overpowered me.
A decade after his debut LP and two and a half years after the launch of his “WTF” podcast, Marc Maron finds himself in some rarified company as one of the most important people in comedy.
Oscar-winning director Chuck Workman will be present for screenings of his films at 6:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. Thursday and Friday, as well as at a seminar in the cinema at 3 p.m. Friday.
The Cardinal Stage Company, a nonprofit organization founded in 2006, is bringing a new sort of play to Bloomington — one that is listed as “for mature audiences only” and defies tradition — a world away from the classics it has produced in the past, such as “The Sound of Music” and “My Fair Lady.”
The deadline for artists to apply for the 32nd Annual Arts Fair on the Square is April 2.
Liz relies on the class as a way to escape for an hour and be worry free. Even though the class allows Liz to make extra money and is a responsibility, it helps her escape the worries of school, her relationship and her future.
The second annual Spanish and Portuguese Song Festival will take place from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. today at the Neal-Marshall Black Culture Center.
No matter where you might be on the map, there is no break quite like spring break — especially when you’re surrounded by about 500 students who almost have their day escape canceled.
The deadline for Arts Commission grants is 5 p.m. April 2.
The Union Board Films Committee has partnered with Universal Pictures to bring a prescreening of “American Reunion” to the Whittenberger Auditorium in the Indiana Memorial Union today.
Two Bloomington rock bands packed up their equipment and headed to Austin, Texas, last week to perform multiple shows at the city’s annual South by Southwest festival, widely known as one of the world’s key events for generating exposure for aspiring creative minds.
But what I’ve discovered after three years of those intense art history classes (ranging from Italian Baroque to installation art; Polykleitos to Piet Mondrian) is that I’ve actually become a better writer. Or, at least, a better fashion writer.
The Flaming Lips will debut a musical this year. The world premiere of “Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots” will be in November 2012, with the show continuing through December.
Students in the IU Theatre and Drama Department will bring frightening, twisted and darkly humorous “The Pillowman” to life at 7:30 p.m. Friday when the Wells-Metz Theatre opens its doors to thrill seekers.
The Pacifica Quartet string ensemble was appointed quartet-in-residence at the IU Jacobs School of Music on March 7. The quartet-in-residence is a highly competitive position responsible for campus and community outreach concerts.
In the movies, the disability is visible: It defines the characters and shoves them into the background. But as part of Disability Awareness Month, the Office of Disability Services for Students at IU is bringing disabilities to the forefront with a series of films that positively portray disabilities as a part of everyday life.
In honor of Youth Art Month, the IU Art Museum is displaying artwork from students in the Monroe County Community School Corporation.
Japanese photographers and curators featured in Pictura Gallery’s “Contemplation” exhibit met last week to discuss the inspiration behind the collection of photographs that documents life in rural Japan.