'Long Exposure' brings pinhole photography to the 21st century
By Milena Ozernova | April 11, 2018In the era of digital cameras, it is very easy to forget what photography looked like before lenses were even invented.
In the era of digital cameras, it is very easy to forget what photography looked like before lenses were even invented.
I didn’t know what to expect of this film, included in this year’s Full Frame Documentary Festival in Durham. Sitting in Cinema One at the Carolina Theatre, I experienced just about every emotional extreme.
“The Price of Everything,” directed by Nathaniel Kahn, portrays key players of the contemporary art world, art market, collectors and artists.
The Durham Farmers' Market is celebrating 20 years since its conception in 1998 and the Durham Craft Market is now in its 12 year since first opening in 2006.
On March 31, Girls Rock NC’s third annual fundraiser Rock Roulette will be held in Motorco Music Hall, where nine new bands formed just two months ago will showcase their hard work and perform original songs and covers.
Take a look inside the passion project of local filmmaker Tom Whiteside, a haven for analog film.
Durham’s own Carolina Theatre is well-known in the community for its special film programming, including their Retro Film Series, the NC Gay + Lesbian Film Festival and the upcoming Anime-Magic Film Series, to name a (small) few.
Where is the line between entertainment and art? This was the question that came up in my conversations with Bill Brown and Sabine Gruffat, two experimental filmmakers and professors at UNC-Chapel Hill who are organizing the Cosmic Rays Film Festival.
Tuesday night, the Durham Co-op Market hosted the first of a series of film screening events. Visitors saw a short film called “Ugly & Wild: Learning to Love N.C. Fish.”
Entering The Carrack last week, it would have been difficult for even the most experienced of gallery-goers to withhold amazement.
The first thing you notice about Dan Bejar, lead singer and songwriter of Destroyer, is that he doesn’t look at the crowd very much when performing live.
Recess section editors Jessica Williams and Christy Kuesel embarked on a food-filled journey throughout the Raleigh-Durham area for Triangle Restaurant Week.
Discarded objects fascinate Calvin Brett. He started exploring art seriously as a painter, but soon realized painting wasn’t his preferred form of expression.
When one thinks of the word “anime,” a few things often come to mind.
For its latest installation, the Power Plant Gallery, located on the American Tobacco Campus, consists of a darkened brick room.
Walter Benjamin, the famed literary and cultural critic, once called “The Arcades Project” — his seminal, fragmentary study of 19th-century Paris — “the theatre of all my struggles and all my ideas.”
‘Tis the season again — if you wander into any shopping mall or city center, you may notice hordes of holiday shoppers clutching their Starbucks hot chocolates and marveling at gingerbread-scented candles.
Girls inherit wisdom about themselves at a young age, and some of that wisdom is undoubtedly meant to save us the time and energy of trying and failing.
“Yes, I’m going to be saying some stuff. So some of you might be getting your feelings hurt. I’m sorry, that’s just reality.”
On Sunday morning, straw blanketed the ground upon which 15 identical blue yoga mats lay in a circle at Hux Family Farm, waiting for the participants of goat yoga to claim their space.