A new ‘Decameron’: U art students respond to COVID-19 with special group project
Reacting to the COVID-19 crisis with photography.
Read MoreReacting to the COVID-19 crisis with photography.
Read MoreOne thing is certain, the arts in schools are not going anywhere.
Read MoreStay well and stay connected.
Read MorePhantom Limb Company’s Falling Out examines the earthquake, tsunami and subsequent nuclear meltdown that ravaged the region of Fukushima, Japan in March of 2011.
Read More“Minari” tells the story of a Korean family that moves to Arkansas to start a farm in the 1980’s.
Read MoreA U interdisciplinary research team receives a federal grant to investigate the value and impact of the arts in medicine.
Read More“I first performed at the U’s Babcock Theatre when I was in 4th grade when I was cast as one of the leads for our school play. As a young person pursuing acting, it was something really valuable to have that experience. That is when—as they say—I caught the theater bug.”
Read MoreJUMP TO: New athletic director to join the U on July 1 Honors College acting dean announced along with two new associate deans College of Fine Arts welcomes two new leaders New software allows fully integrated patient record for School of Dentistry Utah scientists dash to study Hawaii’s volcano Drones on campus Duo 2FA phone […]
Read MoreJUMP TO: New athletic director to join the U on July 1 Honors College acting dean announced along with two new associate deans College of Fine Arts welcomes two new leaders New software allows fully integrated patient record for School of Dentistry Utah scientists dash to study Hawaii’s volcano Drones on campus Duo 2FA phone […]
Read More“My training as a dancer influences how I move throughout the world, how I understand my body and how I interact with others. It affects how I think, how I process things and how I choose to engage with the world. I can’t hear music without thinking about movement and I don’t feel like myself if I go long periods of time without engaging with some sort of movement practice.”
Read MoreThe story behind Art & Art History graduating senior Nemo Miller’s art installation called “A Safe Place for Stressed Out Students, Otherwise Known as The Cry Closet” in the university’s J. Willard Marriott Library.
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