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(04/22/21 4:22am)
"Face Me: a declaration" examines the complexities and intersectionalities of identity, religion and history through a lens that begins in uncertainty and submission and transforms into a celebration of self. Second-year College student Olivia Keenan shares her identity and story through this book of poems to reclaim herself in the context of the historic white patriarchy.
(03/02/21 6:45am)
Maya Taylor is an accomplished and sought-after dancer and choreographer with a career that most artists in her field dream of. Although her resume is quite impressive, what is most magical about Taylor’s work is her unique contemporary style and the creative movement vocabulary she has established through her choreography.
(02/26/21 3:47pm)
In the heat of the pandemic and a toxic social and political climate, AJR’s latest single “Way Less Sad” reflects on the mental health struggles brought on by today’s world. Indie pop trio AJR released their latest single Feb. 17, and despite its cynical implication, the song signifies that things are starting to look up.
(10/30/20 10:05pm)
As a part of the Women in Film series of the Virginia Film Festival, director Catherine Gund’s documentary “Aggie” observes her mother’s journey as a philanthropist to examine art as a “means to transform consciousness and inspire social change,” and to highlight the issue of racial injustice. The film was introduced by Matthew McLendon, the director and chief curator at The Fralin Museum of Arts at the University. McLendon presented Agnes — known as “Aggie” — Gund as a “true visionary” in the “quest for our more perfect union.”
(10/04/20 4:35am)
In a year full of conflict and struggle, a proclamation of the strength and limitlessness of love is just what society needs. Sylvan Esso’s latest album “Free Love” does just that by painting love and life as simple, continuous and intimate.