Video Series from The Game’s Afoot
If you haven’t seen it yet, check out the video series that Philipp Lindemann created with the students in the cast and crew of The Game’s Afoot. It’s interesting to hear from the students themselves
If you haven’t seen it yet, check out the video series that Philipp Lindemann created with the students in the cast and crew of The Game’s Afoot. It’s interesting to hear from the students themselves
NC State professor of horticultural science Will Hooker to install student-built ephemeral bamboo sculpture at the future site of the Gregg Museum of Art & Design. Project Photos and Video: http://go.ncsu.edu/mv1f89 Will Hooker, a professor in the NC
by Kate Dobbs Ariail This kind of thing may be common among technogeeks, but it’s not so common in the arts. Dr. Gary Beckman and his students in the NC State Arts Entrepreneurship Minor are changing
by Orla Swift Sophomore Brian Haidet turns a glass bead over a flame, embellishing it with bands of color. Katie Allen saws a wooden shelf for a jewelry box she designed. A group of women
Michael Seebold won the ARTS NC STATE Creative Artist Award for 2011-2012 for his play The Spyglass Seven. Seebold’s work was produced and performed by NC State University Theatre in September 2013. The Spyglass Seven
Photographer Caroline Hickman Vaughan explains why she chose to give her life’s work and the gift of a lifetime to the Gregg Museum of Art & Design. More than a decade ago, photographer Caroline
Alumnus and successful entrepreneur Kristopher Tyra ’86 explains why every student at NC State should participate in ARTS NC STATE’s University Theatre. Kristopher Tyra ’86 is a person of seemingly boundless energy, who at once
Raleigh’s legacy as a cultural hub by Carrie Knowles 1979. We had been told parking would be a problem so we walked from our house on Dixie Trail to the campus. We had recently moved
The Sizemore family supports NC State and the arts with a major gift to the Gregg Museum Campaign. Thirty-five years ago, Carol and Bing Sizemore bought their first piece of art. They purchased a watercolor
by Orla Swift Colorful shadowboxes line the shelves in Jayme Mellema’s office adjoining the lobby of the Titmus Theatre in Thompson Hall. The small-scale scenic designs– part collage art, part architectural precision– were part of