I’m recommending that you check out They Can’t Kill Us Until They Kill Us, a phenomenal collection of essays by Hanif Abdurraqib, a Columbus, OH-based writer, poet, and critic. Abdurraqib is foremost a music critic, and I am mostly clueless when it comes to music, but that didn’t stop me from loving his essays. He… Read more »
Alumni Profiles: Lalah Hazelwood — Professional Dance Artist
“How can I do my part in bringing joy to people’s lives during this uncertain time?” 2013 IU Contemporary Dance alumni Lalah Hazelwood took the time to talk to me the other day: reflecting on her life post-graduation and sharing her thoughts on how she can now continue to pass her beloved art form, dance,… Read more »
Alumni Profiles: Jeron Braxton – Emerging Digital Artist
A recent Indiana University alum from 2017, Jeron Braxton, graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Digital Art through the Eskenazi School of Art, Architecture, and Design. With the rise in new technological advancements, Jeron is in the position to become an iconic 3D animator of Generation Z. Essentially, Jeron is a self-taught 3D… Read more »
Council Summer Reads
Whether you have the summer off or are busy with school or a job, chances are you still have a bit more time than usual on your hands due to the COVID-19 stay-at-home order. No matter what your plans are, summer comes with lazy afternoons in the sun, perfect for curling up with a good… Read more »
Trip to the Eskenazi: A Look into Lithography
I took a browse through “From Daumier to Toulouse-Lautrec: Icons of French Nineteenth-Century Lithography in the Collection of the Indiana University Eskenazi Museum of Art” and was pleasantly surprised by the array of artwork that the Eskenazi presented for online viewing. I learned that this method of creating visual art flourished in nineteenth century France… Read more »
Trip to the Eskenazi: Swing Landscape
Walk into your local Art Museum and look for a Stuart Davis piece or, in relevant times, just look it up online! With more than 45,000 works of art at the Sidney Lois Eskenazi Museum, I was impressed by the vast collection the online catalog consists of. One of my favorite art movements in the… Read more »
Trip to the Eskenazi: Virtual Impressionism at the Eskenazi
If a piece of art is deemed worthy of being preserved in a museum, we might be led to think it’s always been widely appreciated. This isn’t necessarily the case, though—something highlighted by Dr. Galina Olmsted in her guide to “Impressionism at the Eskenazi Museum of Art.” I completed a French minor at IU, so… Read more »
Time Travel?
With the chain of recent pandemic events disrupting public life and everything transitioning to the digital platform, several museums are still allowing people to experience the iconic content embedded within the museums, no matter where you are located and what the current circumstances entail. Similar to how other businesses are transitioning digitally, online arts programming… Read more »
Redefining Humanity: Our Shared Vulnerability and COVID-19
It’s well acknowledged that we live in the age of hyper-connectivity, one in which our digital technology has in many ways rendered geographic distance obsolete. But COVID-19 has revealed another facet of our interconnectedness: how we’re tied to the rest of our communities on a molecular, bodily level. Our bodies are porous, open to those… Read more »
Redefining Humanity: How Our Words Alter Reality
I have been thinking a lot about language. The words we hear and use everyday impact the way we think and influence the actions we take. The constant transformation of language is both a reflection of the environment and a catalyst for change. That change can be imperceptible and slow-moving or a temporary innovation that… Read more »