Arts & Culture
Kent State's production of "Rent" runs from Feb. 16-25 at the E. Turner Stump Theatre.
Two Media and Journalism students and Associate Professor David Foster are bringing a fresh perspective to a late 1960s photo collection focused on Black student life at ѿappUniversity. Lafayette Tolliver, a 1971 alumnus who pursued a degree in photojournalism, was an active photographer for Black student organizations during his university years. In 2014, he generously donated more than a thousand photographs to Kent State.
Satterfield Hall was filled with the sights, sounds and smells of Lunar New Year as ѿappUniversity students gathered Feb. 14 to celebrate and learn to make Asian dumplings.
Members of Kent State's fashion community participated in a runway show to benefit Ronald McDonald House.
ѿappUniversity’s Wick Poetry Center is collaborating on a new global poem to pay tribute to the liquid that sustains life.
“Dear Body of Water,” Wick’s newest collaboration with the University of Arizona’s Poetry Center, invites writers to speak to the bodies of water that have shaped their lives.
Art students excitedly staffed tables, spreading their love of aesthetic creations to all who came to the Valentine’s art sale on Friday, Feb. 9, in the Center for the Visual Arts. Artistic masterpieces were on display, ready to bring joy to lucky buyers.
Fans of Taylor Swift - and other artists - came together in the Rathskellar to watch the Grammys.
Students, faculty and alumni from ѿappUniversity’s world-renowned School of Fashion sent some of their most exciting designs down the runway on Feb. 8 in Haute for the House, a fashion show that benefitted Ronald McDonald House Charities of Northeast Ohio.
ѿappUniversity student composers had the opportunity to have their works performed in concert by the university’s orchestra.
The ѿappUniversity Museum currently houses extraordinary collections of historic dress, fashion, textiles and decorative arts. More than 29,000 objects from many of the world’s great artists and designers, known and unknown, from across time and continents can be found at the museum. A new grant will help protect the longevity of these artifacts for generations to come.